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r.
Newark,
University
Bulletin
— ■ ^— — i — —Li — — — — — — — — — — — ■
Vol. XV APRIL 29, 1915 No. 10
The Graduate School
k
THIRTIETH YEAR
1915 — 1916
Published Monthly, November-March
and Weekly, April-June
Office of Publication
5 Depot Street, Concord, N. H.
Editorial Office
University Building, Washington Square East,
New York.
Entered at the Concord, N. H. Post Office as second-class
matter under the Act of July 16, 1894.
CONTENTS
PAGE
Calendar 5
Faculty 7
General Statement 12
Admission and Enrollment 12
Regulations Governing the Election of Courses and Credit . . 14
Regulations Governing the Granting of Advanced Degrees . . 15
Fees 19
Fellowships and Scholarships 20
Location, Buildings, etc 24
Library and Laboratory Facilities 25
Teachers' Bureau 27
University Philosophical Society 28
Deems Lectureship 28
Courses of Instruction According to Departments:
Group I. Ancient Languages.
Greek 31
Latin 32
Semitic Languages 33
Group II. Modern Languages.
English 35
Germanic Languages 36
Romance Languages 38
Group III. Philosophy and Religion.
Philosophy, Comparative Religion 40-43
Group IV. Education.
Education 43
Group V. Social Sciences.
History 45
Economics and Finance 47
Government 48
Sociology and Anthropology 51
Group VI. Mathematical and Physical Sciences.
Mathematics, Physics 54-55
Chemistry 56
Geology and Geography 58
Group VII. Biological Sciences.
Anatomy, Bacteriology, Zoology, Biological
Chemistry, Pharmacology and Applied Thera-
peutics and Physiology 59-61
New York University
PAGE
List of Doctors of Philosophy 62
List of Doctors of Science 92
List of Masters of Art 96
List of Masters of Philosophy 146
List of Masters of Science 147
The Council of the University 155
The Women's Advisory Committee 156
Statistical Summary of the University 158
The Graduate School
Calendar, 1916-1916
1915
Sept.
25,
Saturday,
Oct.
12,
Tuesday,
Oct.
15,
Friday,
Oct.
30,
Saturday,
Nov.
2,
Tuesday,
Nov.
9,
Tuesday,
Nov.
15,
Monday,
Nov.
25-27 (inclusive),
Thurs. to Sat.,
Dec.
1,
Wednesday,
Dec.
14,
Tuesday,
Dec. 23, 1915- Jan. 1, 1916
Thurs. to Sat.,
(inclusive),
1916
Jan.
30,
Monday,
Feb.
12,
Saturday,
Feb.
14.
Monday,
Feb. 22,
March 14,
April 17-24,
April 18,
April 15,
May 1,
May 9,
May 8-May 20 (inclusive),
June 7,
Tuesday,
Tuesday,
Mon. to Mon.
Tuesday,
Saturday,
Monday,
Tuesday,
Mon. to Sat.,
Wednesday,
Graduate School opens.
Stated Faculty Meeting.
First Term Fees due.
Last day for filing applica-
tions for Enrollment.
Election Day, Holiday.
Stated Faculty Meeting.
Last day for filing Subject and
Outline of Doctor's Thesis.
Thanksgiving Recess.
Last day for filing title of
Master's Thesis.
Stated Faculty Meeting.
Christmas Recess.
Second Terms begin.
Lincoln's Birthday, Holiday.
Last day for filing applica-
tion for Enrollment in the
Second Term.
Washington's Birthday, Holi-
day.
Stated Faculty Meeting.
Easter Recess.
Stated Faculty Meeting.
Last day for presenting Doc-
tor's Thesis.
Last day for presenting Mas-
ter's Thesis.
Stated Faculty Meeting.
Final Examinations.
Commencement.
New York University
Officers and Office Hours
The Dean of the Graduate School may be seen in the office of the Secretary,
on the ninth floor of the University Building, Washington Square, Saturdays
in October, 10 a.m. to 1 'p.m., and during the week at Butler Hall, University
Heights; also by appointment. The Secretary of the Graduate School may be
seen at his office, Washington Square, Tuesdays, 2~k; Fridays, 1^-5; Satur-
days, 9.30-11.15, and at other times by appointment.
The Registrar s office, on the tenth floor of the University Building, is open
daily, after September 12, from 9.80 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Applications for Matriculation or Enrollment should be addressed to the
Secretary of the Graduate School, Washington Square.
The consultation hours of the Professors will be found given in this circular
under their respective departments.
The Graduate School
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
THE GRADUATE SCHOOL
FACULTY OF THE SCHOOL
Elmer Ellsworth Brown, Ph.D., LL.D.,
Chancellor of the University, Washington Square.
Daniel W. Herlng, C.E., Ph.D., LL.D.,
Dean of the Faculty, Professor of Physics,
Abram S. Isaacs, Ph.D.,
Professor of Semitic Languages
and Literatures, 471 Ellison
Ernest Gottlieb Sihler, Ph.D.,
Professor of the Latin Language and Literature,
Marshall S. Brown, M.A.,
Professor of History and Political Science,
Charles L. Bristol, Ph.D.,
Professor of Biology,
Lawrence A. McLouth, M.A., LL.D.,
Professor of the German Language
and Literature,
Joseph French Johnson, D.C.S.,
Professor of Political Economy and Finance,
Robert MacDougall, Ph.D.,
Professor of Descriptive Psychology,
James E. Lough, Ph.D., Pd.D.,
Professor of Experimental Psychology,
Thomas W. Edmondson, Ph.D.,
Professor of Mathematics,
2208 Andrews Ave.
St., Paterson, N. J.
University Heights.
University Heights.
University Heights.
University Heights.
Washington Square.
Washington Square.
Washington Square.
University Heights,
New York University
John A. Mandel, Sc.D.,
Professor of Chemistry,
William H. Park, M.D., LL.D.,
Professor of Bacteriology and Hygiene,
Charles Gray Shaw, Ph.D.,
Professor of Ethics and Assistant Professor
of Philosophy,
Archibald L. Bouton, M.A.,
Professor of English,
William E. Waters, Ph.D.,
Professor of Greek,
Thomas M. Balliet, Ph.D.,
Professor of the Science of Education,
George B. Wallace, M.D.,
Professor of Pharmacology,
Frederick H. Wilkens, Ph.D.,
Associate Professor of German,
Arthur E. Hill, Ph.D.,
Professor of Analytical Chemistry, Director
of the Havemeyer Chemical Laboratory,
J. Loring Arnold, Ph.D.,
Professor of Electrical Engineering,
Joseph Edmund Woodman, S.D.,
Professor of Geology, Director of Laboratory
of Geology,
Herman H. Horne, Ph.D.,
Professor of the History of Education and
of the History of Philosophy,
Holmes Condict Jackson, Ph.D.,
Professor of Physiology, Director of Labora-
tory of Physiology,
Harold D. Senior, M.B., F.R.C.S.,
Professor of Anatomy,
Jeremiah W. Jenks, Ph.D., LL.D.,
Professor of Government and Public Admin-
istration,
338 East 26th St.
338 East 26th St.
University Heights.
University Heights.
430 West 118th St.
Absent on leave.
338 East 26th St.
University Heights.
University Heights.
University Heights.
University Heights.
Washington Square.
338 East 26th St.
338 East 26th St.
Washington Square.
The Graduate School
Willis Fletcher Johnson, L.H.D.,
Honorary Professor of the History of
American Foreign Relations, Washington Square.
Felix E. Schelling, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D.,
John Welsh Centennial Professor of English Literature in the
University of Pennsylvania; Graduate Lecturer in English,
_ „ „ Washington Square.
Lee Galloway, Ph.D.,
Associate Professor of Commerce and
Industry,
John P. Simmons, Sc.D.,
Assistant Professor of Chemistry,
Samuel A. Brown, M.D.,
Assistant Professor of Medicine,
Edwin J. Clapp, Ph.D.,
Professor of Economics,
Theodore F. Jones, Ph.D.,
Assistant Professor of History, Secretary
Paul R. Radosavljevich, Ph.D., Pd.D.,
Professor of Experimental Pedagogy,
Arthur Huntington Nason, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of English,
Frederick W. Thyng, Ph.D.,
Assistant Professor of Anatomy,
Rudolph M. Binder, Ph.D.,
Assistant Professor of Sociology,
George I. Finlay, Ph.D.,
Assistant Professor of Geology,
E. M. Ewlng, Sc.D.,
Assistant Professor of Physiology,
Perley L. Thorne, M.A.,
Assistant Professor of Mathematics,
Philip B. Kennedy, M.A.,
Assistant Professor of Economics,
Beverly S. Allen, Ph.D.,
Assistant Professor of English,
Earle B. Babcock, M.A.,
Professor of Romance Languages,
Washington Square.
University Heights.
338 East 26th St.
University Heights.
University Heights.
Washington Square.
University Heights.
338 East 26th St.
Washington Square.
University Heights.
338 East 26th St.
University Heights.
Washington Square.
University Heights.
University Heights.
10
New York University
Clayton C. Kohl, Ph.D.,
Associate Professor of Secondary
Education,
Earl F. Farnau, Ph.D.,
Assistant Professor of Chemistry,
Louis Delamarre, Ph.D.,
Lecturer on the French Language
and Literature,
James Sullivan, Ph.D,
Lecturer on Methods in History,
Erich Hausmann, Sc.D.,
Lecturer on Electricity,
George R. Montgomery, Ph.D.,
Lecturer on Philosophy,
Aristine P. Munn-Recht, B.A., M.D.,
Lecturer on Pedagogy,
Vittorio Racca, Jur.D.,
Lecturer on Italian,
Raymond B. Earle, Sc.D.,
Lecturer on Geology,
Joseph Kahn, Pd.M., Ph.D.,
Instructor in Philosophy,
Lester L. Callan, B.A., LL.M.,
Instructor in Law,
John Whyte, M.A.,
Instructor in German and in Anglo-Saxon,
Ralph P. Oesper, Ph.D.,
Instructor in Chemistry,
Earl W. Crecraft, Ph.D.,
Instructor in Government,
William Clarke Noble, Ph.D.,
Instructor in Bacteriology,
Stuart Cameron McLeod, Ph.D.,
Instructor in Government,
Milton E. Loomis, M.A.,
Instructor in Finance,
Washington Square.
University Heights.
Washington Square.
Washington Square.
University Heights.
Washington Square.
Washington Square.
Washington Square.
University Heights.
Washington Square.
Washington Square.
University Heights.
University Heights.
Washington Square.
338 East 26th St.
Washington Square.
Washington Square.
The Graduate School 11
Frank Andrews Fall, M.A.,
Bursar of the University, Washington Square.
George C. Sprague, Ph.D.,
Registrar of the University, Washington Square.
Eva M. Moses,
Assistant Recorder of the Graduate School, Washington Square.
12 New York University
THE GRADUATE SCHOOL
General Statement
The Graduate School of New York University offers advanced
courses of instruction to men and women who have received the
degree of Bachelor from some college in good standing. It is the aim
of the School to afford those who have already enjoyed a liberal
education opportunity to pursue advanced study, and to make
independent research in the line of their special chosen subject.
An effort is made so to shape the methods of instruction as not
only to make the student well versed in the contemporary knowl-
edge of his department, but also to fit him to add to that knowledge
by scientific investigation and discovery. Students who have satis-
factorily completed courses of study and have complied with the
requirements governing the granting of degrees as given below,
upon recommendation of the Faculty, are granted the degree of
Master of Arts, Master of Science, Doctor of Philosophy, or Doctor
of Science, as the case may be. These degrees will be conferred
by the University only upon completion of resident graduate study,
tested by examinations and by theses, and are given, in no case,
honoris causa, or for work done in absentia.
Regulations Governing Admission and Enrollment
1. To secure matriculation in the Graduate School a certificate
must be submitted showing that the candidate is a graduate of a
college of good standing, and has received the baccalaureate degree
in arts, science, philosophy or letters. An official form for this
purpose will be forwarded by the University upon application.
In an extraordinary case, where the baccalaureate degree has not
been received, as, for example, in the case of a person who has studied
in a foreign University where the degree is not given, a candidate may
be received by special act of the Faculty upon the presentation of testi-
monials establishing the fact that he has completed a course of study
equivalent to the undergraduate college course of New York University.
As a general rule equivalents are not accepted from American students
and the applicant is advised to enroll in the Washington Square
College as a candidate for a recognized Bachelor's degree.
The Graduate School 13
2. Certain courses, those numbered in this circular from 101
to 200, intended primarily for graduates, are open also to senior stu-
dents of other departments of the University. No credit will be
given in the Graduate School for courses upon which any student not
a graduate or senior is in attendance. Students pursuing graduate
courses under this rule are enrolled not as graduate students, but
as students of the school in which they are candidates for degrees,
and upon the successful completion of a course receive credit for
the same in accordance with the regulations of that school.
3. All students before entering upon a course in the Graduate
School, whether as matriculants or otherwise, must fill out and file
with the University Registrar or the Secretary of the school an
application for enrollment for the current year. This application
must be made upon the official blank furnished by the University,
and must show the courses it is proposed to enter. This applica-
tion must be filed not later than the thirty-first day of October for
courses given the first term, and the fourteenth day of February
for courses beginning the second term. Students permitted to enroll
after those dates by special action of the Faculty will be required to
pay an additional fee of $5.00. Failure to enroll will debar the
student from receiving credit for the courses of the current
year.
4. No candidate shall be considered as finally enrolled until the
Faculty shall have acted upon and approved the application so
filed. Upon the admission of a candidate to final enrollment, he
will receive from the Secretary a certificate of admission.
5. A matriculated student is held to remain in continuous attend-
ance so long as such student enrolls and properly attends at least one
course in each academic year. In the case, however, of students
who have completed the number of courses required for a degree,
residence will be considered to extend over an additional period
of one year, provided an outline for a thesis shall have been duly
presented within one year subsequent to the completion of the last
of the aforesaid courses, and an enrollment fee of $5.00 be paid.
In the case of candidates for the Doctor's degree an additional year
14 New York University
or more will be allowed for the completion of the thesis subsequent
to the filing of the outline, provided the student enroll and pay an
enrollment fee of $5.00 each year.
6. Students will be considered candidates for a degree under the
conditions prescribed for such candidacy at the time of their matric-
ulation, provided they remain in continuous attendance; interrup-
tion of such attendance for one year entails re-matriculation. The
rules in force at the time of such re-matriculation shall govern the
candidacy for the degree.
Regulations Governing the Election of Courses and Credit for the
Same
1. By a Course in the Graduate School is intended the work pre-
scribed for a class which meets the instructor two hours each week
for at least thirty weeks. A Half Course is the work prescribed
for a class which meets one hour a week. Unless otherwise stated,
two half courses will be accepted as equivalent to one full course
in all requirements.
The nature of graduate work is such that it is expected that the
time given by the student to work outside of the classroom, in the way
of collateral reading, independent research, and prescribed themes, will
be at least double the amount of time ordinarily required in connection
with an equivalent amount of classroom work in the University College,
or in other departments of the University, and in many cases may
much exceed this minimum amount.
2. Students are permitted to pursue any courses they may elect,
subject to the general supervision of the Faculty, and to such
regulations as to preliminary qualifications as the Professor in
charge may prescribe, and subject further in the case of candidates
for degrees to the requirements given below.
3. Students desiring to take more than three full courses in any
one year must secure the special consent of the Faculty, which will
be granted, in ordinary cases, only when the student is devoting
his whole time to graduate study.
The Graduate School 15
4. To receive credit for a course, a student must be in regular
attendance throughout the year, and must pass a satisfactory final
written examination under the conditions given below. A report
of the result of each year's examinations will be made by the Secre-
tary to each student within one month from the time of the exam-
ination. A student who fails to complete all the requirements of
a course at the usual time may be allowed an extension of time
by the instructor, not to exceed one year, to complete the require-
ments or to remove a condition.
(a) The duration of each examination shall be from three to four
hours.
(b) Extended written work, during the progress of a course, such as
themes, monographs, or theses, presented before the day of examination,
may, at the professor's discretion, be reckoned as covering one half
of the time required for examination. Such written work may be
considered by the Committee as a part of the examination exercise.
(c) The least time devoted in any case to the written examination on
the part of a student shall be one hour and a half.
5. Credit may be given for graduate work done in certain Univer-
sities of established reputation in graduate work, or in certain
theological seminaries when such work is not credited toward a
professional degree, when certified by the proper authorities.
In all cases, residence at this University for at least one year is
required of candidates for degrees.
6. Credit may be given for graduate work in the Summer School
of New York University under the following conditions:
(a) The course must be substantially identical with some course
given in the Graduate School, must be given by a member of the Grad-
uate School Faculty, or under his direction, and must be equal in the
number of hours of attendance required to the corresponding course in
the Graduate School.
(6) To secure credit, a student must undertake no work in any one
session of the Summer School beyond the one full course.
Regulations Governing the Granting of Advanced Degrees
Students, regularly matriculated in the Graduate School, may
be recommended for the degrees of Master of Arts (M.A.), Master
16 New York University
of Science (M.S.), Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) and Doctor of
Science (Sc.D.) respectively, upon satisfactory fulfillment of the
following requirements:
Degree of Master
1. The degree of Master will be granted to none save Bachelors of at least
one year's standing.
2. Candidates for the degree of Master must have satisfactorily completed
four or more full courses, two at least of which shall be in one department.
Candidates for Master of Arts must present three courses selected from
Groups I-V; candidates for Master of Science must present three courses
in Groups VI-VII. At least two of the four required courses must be taken
at New York University. At least half of the required work must be in
courses open to graduate students only.
3. In addition to the four courses so prescribed, candidates for the Master's
degree will be required, unless otherwise ordered by special action of the
Faculty, to submit a thesis — which thesis will be referred to a special com-
mittee of the Faculty, who will report in writing upon its acceptance or
rejection.
Requirements for the Master's Thesis
(a) The subject of the thesis must belong to the field of knowledge
in which the student presents at least two of his courses, and must be
chosen under the direction of a professor conducting one of those
courses.
(6) The title, with the written approval of the professor, must be in
the hands of the Secretary of the Faculty on or before December 1st.
(c) The thesis must not be a mere essay; it must present evidence of
a thorough knowledge of some limited special field, obtained by recourse
to original sources.
(d) A thorough knowledge of the accessible literature bearing upon
the subject will be required. As evidence of this, an exhaustive bibli-
ography of the topic under investigation must be appended, to which
constant reference must be made in the body of the thesis.
(e) An appropriate length would be from two to five thousand words;
but adequate treatment of the subject will be required.
(/) It should be typewritten on firm paper, 8^ x 11 inches in size
with a margin of 1^ inches on the left-hand side of the page. After
approval the thesis will remain in the possession of the University
Library.
(g) A good, though not necessarily a literary form, will be required.
The Graduate School 17
(h) While no extended original investigation is expected in a Master's
Thesis, such conclusions as are reached must be so supported as to be
regarded as proven.
(i) The Thesis, in its completed form, must be in the hands of the
Secretary of the Faculty on or before May 1st preceding the com-
mencement at which the degree is sought.
Degree of Doctor
1. The candidate must hold an approved Bachelor's degree of at least
three years' standing.
2. He shall ordinarily spend three years or its equivalent in resident grad-
uate study, of which at least one year shall have been at this University.
Such work shall be taken as may be prescribed by the committee of the
group in which the department of his Major subject lies, subject to Faculty
rules, and shall be divided between the candidate's principal subject, to be
known as his Major, and related subjects to be known as Minors. At least
half of the work taken in residence must be in courses open to graduate
students only.
3. In addition to the examinations given at the close of each course, the
candidate must show, by an extended written examination, thorough mastery
of a special field of knowledge — to be defined by the professors of the depart-
ment in which the field lies; and by an oral examination, such knowledge
both of the general field of the department and of related subjects as may
be outlined by the graduate Faculty. This oral examination shall be con-
ducted by a commission of the Graduate Faculty, including the professors
in the department concerned and in related departments. In no case shall
the commission consist of less than five members. The findings of the
commission shall be reported to the Faculty for action.
4. He must have attended a seminar conducted by the department exclu-
sively for candidates for the Doctorate, the scope and method of the seminar
and the requirements for admission to it to be such as each department
may determine. Upon completion of the seminar, he must secure the
recommendation of the instructor in charge of the seminar for the final
examination. No candidate shall be recommended who has not satisfied
the instructor that his knowledge of at least two foreign languages is such
as give to him command of the foreign publications which may be in the
judgment of the department requisite for mastery of his special field.
5. He must show ability for independent investigation and scholarly
technique by a thesis. This thesis, known as the " Thesis for the Doctorate,"
is required of all candidates for the Doctor's degree. Great weight is attached
to this requirement. It is expected that the preparation of an acceptable
18 New York University
thesis will usually require the greater part of an academic year. The thesis
must conform to the following rules:
(a) On or before November 15th of the college 3-ear in which the
degree is sought, the subject of the thesis, together with a preliminary
typewritten outline showing the proposed scope and method of treat-
ment, must be filed with the Secretary of the School. In case the student
is a candidate for the conferment of the degree at some other time than
Commencement, this condition may be met by filing the subject and
outline at least six months before the student purposes to appear for
his final examination.
(6) The subject and outline must be approved by the instructor in
charge of the seminar of the department in which the student is a can-
didate and by such other members of the Faculty as the Dean may
appoint a committee for the purpose. Ordinarily, the outline is to be
examined by two members of the Faculty, and in case of disagreement
a third member shall be added.
(c) The thesis must show ability to handle the tools of scholarship,
and the application of approved methods of investigation. It must
give evidence of exhaustive study of a narrow field, and be an authori-
tative statement of knowledge secured at first hand. The thesis should
either add to the knowledge of the special subject, or collect and present
existing knowledge in more comprehensive and orderly form.
(d) Ordinarily, the number of words in the thesis should be not less
than 5,000 nor more than 30,000, but the treatment should be as con-
cise as the nature of the subject permits. Every thesis should contain
a clear introductory statement of what it is proposed to establish or
investigate, and likewise a final summary of results.
(e) The thesis must have a title page, bearing the subject, the author's
name, and the statement: "Submitted in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (or Science) at
New York University." The thesis must include an analytical table
of contents and a bibliography of the subject.
(/) The thesis must be presented in typewriting on firm paper 8^ x 11
inches in size, with a margin 1| inches on the left-hand side of the
page. The pages must be fastened securely together, and must
have a cover bearing the writer's name.
(g) The thesis must be filed with the Secretary of the Graduate School
on or before April 15th, or at least one month before the candidate's
final examination. With the thesis shall be filed a formal application
for permission to take the final written and oral examinations for
the degree. The application shall state the candidate's department
The Graduate School 19
and group, and shall bear the written approval of the instructor in
charge of the seminar of that department in which the thesis lies.
(h) The thesis must be read by a committee of the Faculty, the
members of which committee shall report severally, in writing, upon
its acceptance or rejection. The committee's report of the thesis shall
be submitted to the proper Group Committee and the decision shall
be final only when confirmed by the Faculty, in connection with the
report of the commission appointed to pass upon the candidate's final
examination.
(i) A thesis having been finally approved by the Faculty must be
printed in a form acceptable to the University, and fifty copies deposited
with the Librarian of the University. The published thesis shall bear
the following certificate: "This thesis has been accepted by the Gradu-
ate School of New York University, in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (or Science)."
As a guarantee of the publication of the thesis, a deposit of $100 shall
be made with the University Bursar. This sum shall be refunded when
the required fifty copies have been deposited with the Librarian, or
in case the thesis has not been printed, within one year from the date
of its acceptance, the deposit shall be forfeited and applied to the fund
for the publication of Graduate theses. In case a student is unable to
make the deposit, the conferment of the degree may be postponed for
one year, to permit the fulfillment of the requirements for the printing
of the thesis.
[The above requirements for the Degree of Doctor apply to all students matriculated
subsequent to April 1, 1912. Other students will be governed by the regulations in
force at the time of their matriculation provided they have maintained continuous
enrollment.]
Fees and Expenses
Matriculation Fee (paid once only) $5 . 00
Fee for Instruction :
Each full course, per year 25 . 00
Each half course, per year 15 . 00
Fee for Diploma, Master's or Doctor's Degree 20 . 00
Laboratory Fee, Chemistry, per year 20 . 00
Laboratory Fee, Medical Science Courses, each course . . . 10.00
The enrollment fee required of candidates for degrees employed
in the completion of a thesis is $5.00 per year.
20 New York University
No application for matriculation will be considered until the
matriculation fee has been paid. The fee will be returned in case
the application is rejected. The laboratory fee in chemistry must
be paid at the laboratory upon entrance upon the course.
A student who is a candidate for the Doctor's degree must have
paid to the Graduate School fees for instruction amounting to at
least $200, except in the case of students who hold an approved
Master's degree at the time of matriculation, in which case the mini-
mum fee is $100. In all other cases the minimum fee will be required
irrespective of any credit allowed for Graduate work in other insti-
tutions. When a student of the Graduate School pursues courses
in other schools of the University, the fees paid for such courses
will not be credited toward the minimum fee for instruction in the
Graduate School, unless the courses are announced in the Gradu-
ate School Bulletin.
Fees for instruction are due upon entrance upon the course, and
must be paid not later than October 15th, to the Bursar at Washing-
ton Square. When the fee amounts to more than $25, it may be
paid in two installments, half October 15th and half February 15th.
Failure to pay fees promptly will debar from classes.
Special Privileges to Students of Certain Theological Seminaries
Exemption from the fees for instruction and examination in the
Graduate School is granted to undergraduate students of the fol-
lowing theological seminaries: Union Seminary, General Theo-
logical Seminary, Princeton Seminary, Drew Seminary, New
Brunswick Seminary, St. Joseph's Seminary and the Jewish Semi-
nary of America.
FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS
A. Odgen Butler Fellowships
Two fellowships, founded by Mr. Charles Butler, are offered each
year to students completing the course in Arts, as incentives to
Graduate Study; namely,
The A. Ogden Butler Classical Fellowship, endowed with $6,000.
The Graduate School 21
The A. Ogden Butler Philosophical Fellowship, endowed with
$6,000. I
These Fellowships are equal in rank, and will be bestowed by the
Faculty of the College of Arts and Pure Science upon two members
of the Graduating Class, standing as to scholarship in the uppermost
third of the class. A student in order to receive the award of a Fel-
lowship must have made such attainments in scholarship as, in
the judgment of the Faculty, will justify him in pursuing advanced
studies in the Liberal Arts. Further, the student must have enrolled
himself as a candidate for the degree of Master from the University
and must take at least four full courses, during the year of bis
incumbency. The work of the Fellow shall include research in the
line of study for the encouragement of which the Fellowship is
founded and may also include teaching duties such as the Chan-
cellor may appoint.
In case in any year the Fellowship be not awarded or the income
of an awarded Fellowship become not payable because its incumbent
has not met the conditions named, then the income of such Fellow-
ship shall be devoted to the fund for Graduate Scholarships.
William H. Inman Fellowship
Founded by Miss Inman
The principal of this fund, amounting to $5,000, is held by the
University, the income arising from the same to be used for the sup-
port of the William H. Inman Fellowship. This fellowship is to be
awarded to a student completing an undergraduate course whose
scholarship places him in the foremost third of his class, and whose
attainments are such, in the judgment of the Faculty, as will qualify
him to pursue advanced studies in science. Further, the student
must have enrolled himself as a candidate for the degree of Master
from the University under the rules prescribed. Further, he must
serve for one year as a Demonstrator or Assistant in the Laboratory
of Analytical Chemistry. But the last-named condition may, for
sufficient reasons, be suspended by action of the Faculty.
The tenure of the Fellowship is for one year, and it is to be known
upon the records of the University and announced in each annual
catalogue as the William H. Inman Fellowship.
22 New York University
Fellowships in Education
Students of the School of Pedagogy pursuing courses in education
in the Graduate School may become candidates for Fellowships
in the School of Pedagogy as announced in the bulletin of that
School.
The Ottendorfer Memorial Fellowship
The Ottendorfer Memorial Fellowship for Germanic Philology,
with an annual income of $800, with a maximum allowance of $100
for books, was established in New York University in 1901, by the
friends and admirers of the late Hon. Oswald Ottendorfer, LL.D.
The following announcement for 1914-1915 is made respecting
this foundation:
Candidates must present satisfactory evidence of the following
minimum qualifications:
(a) Bachelor's degree from an American college recognized by
the New York Board of Regents;
(b) Ability to read easily English, German, French, and Latin;
(c) Ability to speak and write English and German;
(d) An elementary knowledge of two of the older Germanic
dialects;
(e) A knowledge of the history of German literature;
(/) Such ability as to warrant the belief that the candidate, if
appointed, will be able to make original investigations in
Germanic language and literature;
(g) Age, as not more than twenty-five years.
The Duties of the Ottendorfer Memorial Fellow for 1915-1916
will be:
(a) To report for duty, October 1, 1915;
(b) To devote his time to the study of Germanic language and
literature under the direction of the Committee, wherever
(at least six months in Germany) it may direct;
(c) To publish, under the direction of the Committee and under
the name of the Fellowship, the results of his investi-
gations.
One reappointment may be made, but only for superior attain-
ments. Appointment will be made about April 15, 1915.
The Graduate School
The appointee for 1914-1915 is A. L. T. Stark.
Publications issued in accordance with the provisions of this
foundation are: (1) Schiller's Einfluss auf die Jugenddranten Heb-
bels. Die Jungfrau von Orleans und Hebbels Judith; eine Studie
uber das Drama von Ernst Otto Eckelmann. 1906. 106 S. 8. (2)
Zur Liederpoesie in Fischarts Gargantua von Charles Allyn Williams,
71 S. Halle a. S. Max Niemeyer, 1909. (3) Tieck's Essay on the
Boy dell Shakespere Gallery by George H. Danton. Ifl pp. 1912.
(4) Tristan and Isolt. A Study of the Sources of the Romance, by
Gertrude Schoeperle, Ph.D. 2 vols. 590 pp. 1913.
The Committee on the Fellowship consists of Hon. Charles F.
MacLean, Adolph Kuttroff, Esq., and August Zinsser, Esq.
Candidates may apply for further particulars and for application
blanks to Lawbence A. McLouth, Professor of Germanic Lan-
guages and Literatures, University Heights, New York City.
Graduate Scholarships
Remsen Graduate Scholarship. — This scholarship was founded
April, 1896, by R. G. Remsen, Jr., '73.
Richard H. Bull Graduate Scholarship. — This scholarship
was founded June 1, 1887, by Richard H. Bull, Ph.D., who filled
the chair of Engineering from 1853 to 1884.
Ellinwood Scholarship in Comparative Religion. — This
scholarship, founded in 1904, provides tuition in the courses in Com-
parative Religion.
Class op '90 Scholarship. — This scholarship founded 1905 pro-
vides tuition in two courses.
Faculty Graduate Scholarships covering tuition are in the
gift of the Faculty, to be bestowed upon graduate students who
may be found entitled to them by their scholarship. They are
intended to provide for the fees for courses in the Graduate School.
To obtain one of these scholarships, a student must have enrolled
himself and paid his fees for the year by November 1. He must,
by November 30, have presented to the Dean a statement including
the following items: (1) The college at which his Bachelor's degree
has been received, specifying the particular degree and the year of
its reception; (2) The number of members in his class at gradua-
24 New York University
tion; (3) His own relative position in the class by giving his num-
ber on the roll arranged according to scholarship; (4) The branch
of study in which he made his best record; (5) Certification of
above by some officer of the college named.
The Faculty will select the student or students standing highest
as judged by the record obtained as above named, and further, by
such original work and especial testimonials of work as may be
offered by the candidate to the Faculty and accepted.
Graduate Scholarships for Alumni op Certain Colleges
in Ohio. — The following scholarships provide tuition, each to the
amount of not over $100 a year, in the University Graduate School
for such graduate of the college named as its President may recom-
mend to the Chancellor of the University:
William L. Strong Scholarship, for graduates of Kenyon
College, Gambier, Ohio.
A. D. Julliard Scholarship, for graduates of Wooster Univer-
sity, Wooster, Ohio.
Charles T. Barney Scholarship, for graduates of Western
Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio.
S. Loeb Scholarship, for graduates of University of Cincinnati.
Henry M. MacCracken Scholarship, for graduates of Witten-
berg College, Springfield, Ohio.
Location and Buildings
Courses in the University Graduate School, except laboratory
courses in Science, are given at the University Building, Washing-
ton Square East. Certain classrooms on the eighth, ninth, tenth
and eleventh floors are set apart for the use of this school, and the
library and reading-rooms of the University Law School, the School
of Pedagogy, and the School of Commerce, are open also to students
of the Graduate School on equal terms. The social room of the
School of Pedagogy is open also to women students of the Graduate
School.
The building is very centrally located, and can be easily reached
from Brooklyn and New Jersey. The street railway on Eighth
Street, running to Brooklyn and connecting by transfer with all
north and south bound lines, is within a short block of the entrance
The Graduate School 25
to the University elevators on Waverley Place. The Eighth and
Bleecker Street Stations of the Sixth Avenue Elevated Road, the
Ninth Street Stations of the Third Avenue Road and Hudson
Tunnel, and the Astor Place Station of the Subway are within five
minutes' walk.
The classrooms, being on the two upper floors of the building,
are above the noise and dust of the city, and the wide expanse of
Washington Square assures abundant air and light.
Certain courses in Science, requiring the use of laboratory, are
given at University Heights, the magnificent site of the University
College and School of Applied Science, while courses in the Medical
Sciences are given in the Laboratories of the University and Belle-
vue Hospital Medical College at First Avenue and Twenty-sixth
Street.
Library and Laboratory Facilities
The General Library of the University occupies the great
Memorial Library Building at University Heights. Its reading-
room is surpassed by few, if any, rooms of similar character in the
world. The books are arranged according to departments. Eighteen
departments have each their own Seminar Rooms, in or near which
are placed the working libraries of these departments. Graduate
students enjoy the privileges of these private rooms, and may also
take certain books from the library for home study, under the
regulations which will be found in the general catalogue. The
library is catalogued according to the Dewey decimal system.
It includes the following notable collections:
The Lagarde Library of Semitic Languages. — This collection was
purchased by the University in 1896 from the estate of the late
distinguished orientalist, Professor Paul de Lagarde of Gottingen.
It is rich in all branches of Oriental investigation.
The Ottendorfer Germanic Library. — This collection, the gift of
the late Hon. Oswald Ottendorfer, LL.D., of New York, is one of
the two or three most complete collections of its kind in the world.
It numbers over twelve thousand volumes. It contains one hundred
and thirty complete sets of literary journals.
The Hubner Classical Collection. — The New York University in
1902 purchased the entire professional library of the late Dr. Emil
New York University
Htibner, professor of classical philology in the University of Berlin
(February, 1901). This collection, which was made during the fifty
years from 1851-1901, presents a thoroughly efficient apparatus
for the pursuit of graduate study in all branches of classics. It is
well balanced in all these, but is particularly strong in all publi-
cations dealing with the Inscriptions of the Roman Empire, pre-
eminently so in the Epigraphy of the Spanish Peninsula and of
Britain, which Hiibner himself edited in Mommsen's Corpus Inscrip-
tionum Latinarum. The collections of Latin Literature and Latin
Grammar are of similar excellence: they contain the material on
which Hiibner's noted Bibliographical Outlines were based. The
Archaeological Collection, too, is noteworthy — some 3000 mono-
graphs are a part of the collection. A Livy of 1482 and a Vergil of
1502 illustrate the Classicism of the Renaissance.
The Library of the School of Pedagogy, at Washington
Square, is a very complete working library of over nine thousand
volumes, dealing exclusively with philosophical and pedagogical
subjects.
The Library of the School of Commerce, at Washington
Square, contains over six thousand volumes, dealing exclusively
with economic and commercial subjects.
The New York Public Library makes special provision for
meeting the wants of advanced students, and its extensive collec-
tions will be found easily available by Graduate Students, both at
the reading-room, 42d Street and Fifth Avenue, and through the
circulation department for home use.
The Havemeyer Chemical Laboratory, provided by the
liberality of the late William F. Havemeyer, in memory of his father
and brother, is a building three stories in height and occupies an
area of sixty by seventy feet. The lowest story contains workshops
and storerooms as well as an even temperature room for gas analysis
and an Assay Laboratory. The next floor contains a spacious lecture
room, with all appliances for experimentation in pure and applied
chemistry; a laboratory for advanced work in chemical research,
a reading-room with the Solomon Loeb chemical library and the
private laboratory of the Professor of Chemistry. The top floor
contains the private laboratory of the instructors in Chemistry,
The Graduate School 27
and large laboratories for qualitative and quantitative analysis,
together with a balance room, a room for work with noxious gases,
and a library. All the laboratories are provided with the usual
appliances, as well as with lines conveying steam, compressed air,
and suction, to the various desks and oxygen and other gases to
appropriate working tables. The ventilation throughout is by
forced draft.
Charles Butler Hall, the Laboratory of Physics, and the other
laboratories of the School of Applied Science are also well equipped
and their facilities are placed at the command of students in this
department of the Graduate School, so far as the subjects demand.
The Laboratory of the Department op Geology and the
Geological Museum are located in Baker Hall of Philosophy at
University Heights. The collection numbers about 30,000 specimens
and the laboratory is equipped with machinery for cutting and
polishing rocks and fossils.
The Laboratory of the Department of Experimental
Psychology is located on the ninth floor of the University Build-
ing at Washington Square, and is fully equipped with the necessary
apparatus, models, etc.
The Laboratories of the Departments of Anatomy, Bac-
teriology, Pathology and Physiology, at the University Medical
College are situated in the new building erected in 1904 and 1911,
and are fully equipped with the most recent apparatus and supplied
with abundant material.
Teachers* Bureau
The University maintains a Teachers' Bureau for the benefit of
those students who are teachers or who are preparing to enter the
profession. The service of the Bureau is rendered free of charge
to all students of the Graduate School. The Bureau, while making
no promise in regard to placing students as teachers, will do its
best to find them advantageous teaching positions for which, accord-
ing to its judgment, they are prepared. Application blanks may
be secured from the University Registrar.
The Bureau will welcome notices of any vacancies in teaching
positions that may come to the attention of University students.
28 New York University
University Philosophical Society
This Society was organized in 1910 by students of the Graduate
School for the study of philosophic problems. Meetings are held
the first Tuesday in each month throughout the school year.
Membership is open to all students of the University interested in
philosophy. The annual dues are one dollar. The Society under-
takes to publish each year the best thesis submitted in the
Philosophy of Life course. The thesis published in 1914 was by
Clarence Johnson Carver, on " Why I am Compelled to be an
Idealist."
The Charles F. Deems Lectureship
The University accepted, April 15, 1895, from the American
Institute of Christian Philosophy, an endowment of fifteen thou-
sand dollars for the support of a lectureship to be called the Charles
F. Deems Lectureship of Philosophy, under the following rules:
The University agrees to maintain said lectureship by securing for
each year, or each alternate year, a lecturer, eminent in science and
philosophy, who shall treat in not less than six lectures, some one
of the most important questions of science and philosophy, with
special reference to its relation to the revealed truths of the Holy
Scriptures and to the fundamental principles of theistic philosophy.
The lecturer shall be chosen by the University's Committee upon
the Charles P. Deems lectureship, which shall consist of the Chan-
cellor and two members of the Faculty of Arts and Science and two
members of the University Council, to be named as the Council
may direct. The subject of each year's lectures shall be agreed
upon between this Committee and the lecturer.
The University shall provide, free of charge, a room for the
lectures, and shall, at its own expense, make due public announce-
ment of the time and place of each lecture. The University shall
also publish, in book form, each series of lectures, and put the same
on sale with one or more reputable book firms, provided this can
be done without further expense than can be met by the accumula-
tion of income over and above the expense of maintaining the annual
or biennial series of lectures.
The University's Committee at present is constituted as follows:
Chancellor Brown, Dean Hering, Rev. Dr. George Alexander, and
The Graduate School
Dr. Henry M. MacCracken, President of the Institute of Christian
Philosophy, ex officio.
The seventh course upon this foundation was given in May,
1913, by August Karl Reischauer, D.D., Professor of Ethics, and
Philosophy, Meiji Gakuin, Tokio, Japan.
Series of Graduate School Studies
Beginning in 1914 the Faculty will select certain of the theses
presented for the Doctorate, of exceptional merit, for publication
under the auspices of the Faculty. These publications will be
known as the New York University Series of Graduate School
Studies. Copies will be sent postpaid upon receipt of price upon
application to the New York University Bookstore, Washington
Square, New York City. The following issues are now ready:
No. 1. De Versu Heroico Statiano ad Vergilianum Relato, by
Edoardo San Giovanni, Ph.D. Price $1.00.
No. 2. Claims as a Cause of the Mexican War, by Clayton Charles
Kohl, Ph.D., Professor of Education, Mount Holyoke College.
Price $1.00.
No. 3. The Essay in American Literature, by Adaline May Con-
way. Price $1.00.
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION
Graduate Courses of Instruction are announced below, with the
understanding that the instruction in each branch is subject to the
conditions hereinafter specified.
1. The courses are offered subject to such arrangement of matters
of detail as may be made between the student and the professor or
instructor by correspondence or by personal interview.
2. In certain subjects the courses are offered under the condition
that not less than five persons enroll for the course selected.
3. For certain courses acquaintance with the German and French
languages is essential.
4. Courses enclosed in brackets will not be given in 1914-1915.
5. Courses marked (*) are open to Seniors of University College,
of the Washington Square College, and of the School of Commerce
who have permission to take graduate work.
30 New York University
6. Full courses demand attendance each for at least two hours
weekly upon the lectures or seminary instruction of professors.
Half courses may demand attendance for one hour a week for the
whole year, or in certain subjects, two hours weekly for half a year.
But in certain laboratory courses a half course may require two
hours throughout the year. All courses designated in this schedule
as requiring two hours weekly are full courses, unless otherwise
indicated. In the requirements for degrees two half courses are
considered to be the equivalent of one full course.
7. When not specified, the hours of the lectures will be fixed by
special arrangement to suit the convenience of instructor and
students.
GROUP I. ANCIENT LANGUAGES
Chairman of Group Committee: Prof. Ernest G. Sihler, Ph.D.
Secretary of Group Committee: Prof. William E. Waters, Ph.D.
Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy
A. If Greek be the major subject, the candidate will be required in both oral and
written examinations to show his attainments in the following:
(I) The History of Greek Literature of the classical period;
(II) Greek Dialectic forms and usage as they occur in classical Greek: viz., Herod-
otus, Melic poets, and the dramatists;
(III) Attic syntax of cases, moods and tenses;
(IV) Sight-reading in classical Greek literature;
(V) The fundamental principles and types of Versification.
B. If Latin be the major subject, the candidate will be required in both oral and
written examinations to show his attainments in the following:
(I) The History of Roman Literature from Livius Andronicus to Gellius;
(II) The reading of Latin prose Literature at sight to show the candidate's appre-
ciation by his phrasing and emphasis; and of poetry, with the power of scanning the
more current forms of lyric verse;
(III) A ready facility in writing Latin prose without flaw;
Some knowledge of Greek literature is very desirable, in order that the candidate
may understand the unity of connection between all forms of Latin Literature and the
Greek Standard types.
C. If Semitics be the major subject, the candidate will be required in both oral and
written examinations to show his attainments in the following:
(I) Hebrew. Thorough familiaiity with text of Old Testament.
(II) Aramaic. Targums. Ability to read Aramaic inscriptions.
(III) Rabbinic. Lighter Mishna and Talmud treatises.
(IV) Arabic. Some Suras of Koran. Selected poems and histories.
(V) Syriac. Peshito. Selected texts.
The Graduate School 31
(VI) Fair knowledge of Semitic Archaeology. Comparative Semitic Grammar,
familiarity with the history of the Versions (to read with ease the Greek Septuagint
very desirable), and acquaintance with the principles of Biblical criticism.
(VII) Some knowledge of Oriental history and literature, including that of the Jews
in early and Middle Ages, of the Caliphate, and of the Babylonians and Assyrians
must be insisted upon.
DEPARTMENT OF GREEK
Consultation hours: Professor Waters, Saturdays in October 10-12 a. m.,
University Building, Washington Square. On other days, by appointment.
201-202. The Greek Drama. Origin, development and influence of
the classic drama; study of the structure, action and production of Greek
plays; critical study of fifteen selected plays in original and translation.
Haigh's Tragic Drama of the Greeks; Attic Theatre. Full course. Two hours.
Wednesday, 4-6. Professor Waters.
101-102. Homer. His dialect and vocabulary. Homer the poet, and
the object of study and literary criticism. His place in literature and
in archaeology. A course primarily for teachers of Greek. Leaf, Com-
panion to the Iliad; Seymour, Life in the Homeric Age. Iliad, books I- VI;
Odyssey, books I- VIII. Full course. Two hours. Friday, 4-6.
Professor Waters.
301-302. Greek Seminar. The author to be studied will be Dio
of Prusa. As Sophist and philosopher of the first Christian century,
abundant in literary allusions, and native of the region where the first
Christian churches sprang up, he is most suggestive for a Seminar course.
If possible, the course will be given in the University Library. Two
hours. Professor Waters.
[103-104. Attic Prose. Xenophon, as exponent of formal Greek
grammar; his diction and word formation; sentence structure. Xenophon
as historian and essayist. Anabasis, books I, II, IV; Hellenica, books I
and II. This course is adapted to meet the desires of teachers of Greek.
Prose Composition. Full course.] Professor Waters.
105-106. Philosophy. Religion and Philosophy of the Greeks. A
study based on evidences in Greek literature and archaeological discoveries.
Religious teachers. Deities, temples, temple-service and property; cults.
The works of Fernald, Jane Harrison and James Adam will be used.
Ritter and Preller, History of Greek Philosophy. 1 hour. Saturday,
11.15-12.15. Professor Waters.
107-108. Art. Study of architecture, sculpture, painting; the temple
and public buildings; coins, gems, vases. Selected passage from Greek and
32 New York University
Latin writers. Archaeological researches in Greece and Italy to-day. 1 hour.
Saturday, 12.15-1.15. Professor Waters.
109-110. Literature. The general range from Homer through the
period of Alexandrine criticism. Epic, dramatic, and lyric poetry. History,
oratory, and philosophy. In 1914-15 poetry was the principal study, the
dramatists and Theocritus being the writers studied. 1 hour. Saturday,
9.15-10.15. Professor Waters.
111-112. History. The history of Greece through the Roman Conquest"
Greek politics and statecraft. Selected passages of Herodotus, Thucy-
dides, Xenophon; Aristotle's Politics, Plato's Republic, III-V; Bury's
History of Greece and Greek Historians. 1 hour. Saturday, 10.15-11.15.
Professor Waters.
DEPARTMENT OF LATIN
Consultation hours: Professor Sihler, last Saturday in September and
first Saturday in October, 10-12 a. m., University Building, Washington
Square; Monday and Saturday evenings at residence; all day Mondays
at University Heights. Students are invited to use Hiibner collection
freely.
Seminar Requirements for Ph.D. in Latin. 1. Survey of Histoiy of Literature
by systematic work with use of Fischer and Fynes Clinton. Reports on the leading
editions of Latin Classics and all the leading manuals. Sandys' Companion to Latin
Study. 2. (alternative) History of Latin Language. Grammar, synonyms, metre
lexicography, Keil's Grammatici, advanced composition, exercises in Latin discourses.
As to Modern Languages: Reading knowledge of German necessary.
Written and oral examination dealing with one of these two provinces, as well as
with the related subjects bearing on the dissertation for the Doctorate. Sight-reading
in which the candidate may indicate his preference as between poetry and prose liter-
ature.
301-302. Seminar on Suetonius, at University Heights. The Monu-
mentum Ancyranum, with constant reference to Schiller, Merivale, Doma-
szewsky, and other historians. Two hours. Thursday, 4-6, or other hours
to be agreed upon. Professor Sihler.
or
Readings from Gudeman's Latin Literature of the Roman Empire, with
practice in Latin conversation and discourse.
or
Readings from older Latin Texts.
201-202. Pliny's Letters. Imperial Rome under Domitian and Tra-
jan. The higher society and its concerns. Literary production and criti-
The Graduate School 33
cism. Education. Comum. Country-seats and landed property. The
Senate and the Courts. Administration of a province. The Christians.
The Roman Stoics and their fates. Weekly exercises in Latin speech.
Phraseological collections. Copia Verborum and Proprietas Sermonis. Pen
and voice. Two hours. Saturday, 9.15-11.15.
Professor Sihler,
203-204. Quintilian's Institutiones Oratoriae. It is proposed to
present, in connection with this course, an important chapter from the
history of education: i. e., the work of the Grammaticus and Rhetor, together
with a presentation of the nomenclature and terminology of Grammar and
Rhetoric, from Protagoras and Aristotle down to St. Augustine and the
Venerable Bede. Two hours. Saturday, 11.15-1.15.
Professor Sihler.
S6. Seminar in Caesar. July 5th-August 13th. Two hours.
Professor Sihler.
DEPARTMENT OF SEMITIC LANGUAGES
Consultation hours: Professor Isaacs, Washington Square. Last two
Tuesdays in September, 3-4 p.m.
Hebrew
101-102. Book of Ruth, with thorough grammar. Easy narrative
reading and translation into Hebrew. One hour.
201-202. Book of Job, with lectures on the history of the Hebrew
language. Two hours. Tuesday, 1-3 p.m. Professor Isaacs.
203-204. Hebrew Literature. Later Spanish Poets. One hour.
Hours to be arranged. Professor Isaacs.
Aramaic
205-206. Targum Onkelos, with lectures on origin and character of
the Targumin. One hour. Professor Isaacs.
207-208. Semitic Archaeology. The chief Aramaic Inscriptions. One
hour. Tuesday, 11-12 a.m. Professor Isaacs.
Rabbinic
209-210. The Mishna. Sanhedrim, One hour. Tuesday, 3-4 p.m.
Professor Isaacs.
34 New York University
211-212. Selections from the Midrashtm. One hour. Hours to be
arranged. Professor Isaacs.
Syriac
213-214. Nestle's Syriac Grammar, with Chrestomathy. A begin-
ner's course. Hours to be arranged. Professor Isaacs.
215-216. Introduction to Syriac Literature. One hour.
Professor Isaacs.
S3. Advanced Course in Hebrew. July 5th-August 13th. One hour.
Professor Isaacs.
S5. Selections from Midrash. July 5th- August 13th. One hour.
GROUP II. MODERN LANGUAGES
Chairman of Group Committee: Prof. Lawrence A. McLouth, M.A.,
LL.D.
Secretary of Group Committee: Prof. Arthur H. Nason, M.A.
In addition to the general requirements prescribed by the Faculty, and published
on page 17 of this bulletin, the Group of Modern Languages presents the following
special requirements for the Doctorate:
1. Candidates under this group must in addition to English possess a satisfactory
knowledge of the French, German, and such other languages as may be necessary for
the prosecution of their studies. This knowledge will be tested by examination as
soon after the candidate's matriculation as possible, but in no case later than the date
of the preliminary examination specified in Rule 2.
2. A brief preliminary examination in the major subject and the branches related
to it must be passed at least seven months before the Commencement at which the
degree is to be conferred. This examination may be oral or written at the discretion
of the department of the major subject.
3. If the major subject is selected in literature, the candidate must possess (a) a
good general knowledge of the history of the language in which the major subject lies;
and (b) in addition to intimate knowledge of the literature of the special field of his
research, a good general knowledge of the whole literature of the language in which the
special research is undertaken.
4. If the major subject is selected in philology, the candidate must possess a good
general knowledge of the literature of the language of the major subject.
5. In addition to courses taken in the department of the major subject, the candi-
date must take at least two courses outside the department of his major subject, prefer-
ably within the departments of the group.
6. The election of courses by candidates within this group must be approved by
the department of the major subject.
The Graduate School 35
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
Consultation Hours: Professor Bouton, Tuesdays in October, 4 to 5
p. m.; Saturdays, 9.15 to 9.45 a. m., and 11.15 to 11.45; Assistant Professor
Nason, Saturdays in October, 1 p. as.; Assistant Professor Allen, Tuesdays in
October, 4 to 5 p. m., Saturdays, 1.45 to 2.15 p. m.; Mr. Whyte, Fridays at
4 p. m. All consultations thus indicated may be had in the University Build-
ing at Washington Square.
English Literature
201-202. (1) The Comedies of Shakespeare. — First term. In this
course, the student is held responsible for a close acquaintance with all of
the comedies of Shakespeare. Several of them are studied in class with
specific reference to the character of the text, the language, customs and
manners of the age; and their style and diction, their prosody and quality
as drama and poetry are given special attention.
(2) The Histories of Shakespeare. — Second term. In this course the
student is held responsible for a close acquaintance with all of Shakes-
peare's chronicle plays or histories together with selected specimens of cer-
tain other like plays, the work of Shakespeare's contemporaries. Several
of Shakespeare's histories are studied in class as in Course I. Satur-
days, 11.15-1.15. Professor Schelling.
[101-102. The Essay in English.— Not to be given in 1915-16.]
Professor Bouton.
[103-104. English Literary Prose from the Introduction of Print-
ing to the Rise of the Periodicals. — Not to be given in 1915-1916.]
Professor Bouton.
203-204. English Literary Criticism. — A study of methods of criti-
cism as applied especially to poetry, and of the literature of critical writing
in English. Applications of critical method to the study of important Eng-
lish poems. Two hours. Saturday, 9.15-11.15. Professor Bouton.
205-206. English Literature of the Period of the French Revolu-
tion.— A survey of such French and German literature as reveals the dis-
tinctive tendencies of the French revolution, including the work of Rousseau,
Bernadin de St. Pierre, Chateaubriand, Goethe and Schiller. A study of
the manifestations of the revolutionary spirit in the English literature of
the period. Special studies in the poetry of Wordsworth, Coleridge, Southey,
Byron, and Shelley. Tuesdays, 4 to 6 p. m. Assistant Professor Allen.
301-302. Seminar in Thesis- Writing and Research. Lectures on
the methodology of research as applied to the history of English literature,
New York University
with the preparation, by each student, of a series of reports upon an assigned
field of investigation. The course is designed for those students of English
who are preparing theses for the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. Division A,
Fridays, 4-6, in the English Seminar Room, Library Building, University
Heights; Division B, Saturdays, 11.15-1.15, Washington Square.
Assistant Professor Nason.
[105-106. Studies in 18th Century Literature (1) The Neo-classi-
cal Writers. Not to be given in 1915-16.] Assistant Professor Nason
[107-108. Studies in 18th Century Literature (2) The Reaction
from the Neo-Classical Writers. Not to be given in 1915-16.]
Assistant Professor Nason.
English Philology
109-110. Anglo-Saxon. Study of the grammar and syntax of Anglo-
Saxon. Reading of prose, and of Beowulf. Anglo-Saxon versification.
Monday, 4-6 p. m. Mr. Whyte.
S12. Seminar in Eighteenth Century Literature. July 5th-August
13th. Two hours. Assistant Professor Nason.
Si 2a. Seminar in Eighteenth Century Literature. August 13th-
Sepiember 3d, Two hours. Assistant Professor Nason.
DEPARTMENT OF GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND
LITERATURES
Consultation hours: Professor McLouth, every week day, except Friday
and Saturday, 4-5 p.m., at annex, Saturday, 9.15 a.m.-I p.m., at Washing-
ton Square; Associate Professor Wilkens, Tuesdays, 4.15-6.15, p.m., Sat-
urdays, 11.15 a.m-1.15 p.m., at Washington Square; or both at any time
by letter at University Heights.
German Literature
101-102. The " Sturm und Drang " Period of German Litera-
ture (1770-1780), being a study of (a) the beginnings of this movement
in the influence of such writers as Shakespeare, Ossian aud Rousseau;
(6) its development in Germany by Klopstock, Lessing, Hamann and
Herder ; (c) its course as seen in Goethe's Gotz, Werther and early lyrics,
in Schiller's Rauber, Fiesko and Kabale und Liebe, and in the works
of Klinger, Leisewitz, Lenz, Wagner, Miiller and others; (d) the resulting
The Graduate School 37
influx of fuller life into German literature as seen in the subsequent
classical period. Two hours. Tuesday, 4.15-6.15.
Professor McLouth.
201-202. The following choice is offered:
(a) Select Authors of the Late Romantic Movement: Werner, Mueliner, de la
Motte Fouque, Hofi'mann, Chamisso, Eichendorff, Uhland and the Swabian
School;
(b) Schiller in his Mature Period: Aesthetic writings, influence of his theo-
ries on his dramatic works.
Study of representative works, papers and select topics. Two hours.
Saturday, 11.15-1.15.
Associate Professor Wilkens.
German Philology
[103-104. Introductory Course in Middle High German. A study
of the phonology, accidence and syntax of Middle High German, as given
in the latest edition of Hermann Paul's Mittelhochdeutsche Grammatik; the
reading of twenty cantos of the Nibelungenlied (Zarncke's edition) ; lectures
upon the manuscripts, the legends, the origin-theories, the meter, the
antiquities, the literary offspring, etc., of the Nibelungenlied. Each student
will be expected to present a paper upon some assigned topic. Two
hours.] Professor McLouth.
203-204. Introductory Course in Gothic. A study of the phonology
and accidence as given in Wilhelm Braune's Gotische Grammatik; the study
of portions of Streitberg's Urgermanische Grammatik and Stamm-Heyne's
Ulfilas; the reading of selections from the Gospels of Matthew, Mark and
Luke, the Epistle to the Corinthians in Wulfila's translation of the Bible,
and of pages i and vii of the Skeireins. A reading knowledge of Greek is a
decided advantage but not a prerequisite. Two hours. Thursday, 4.15-6.15.
Professor McLouth.
105-106. The following choice is offered:
(a) Elementary Old High German. A study of Braune's Althoch-
deutsche Grammatik (phonology, inflection, elementary syntax); reading of
Braune's Althochdeutsches Lesebuch.
(b) Elementary Old Norse. Noreens' Grammar, Easy Prose Texts.
"Wednesday, 4.15-6.15, or by arrangement. Associate Professor Wilkens.
38 New York University
DEPARTMENT OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
Consultation hours: Professor Rabcock, Dr. Racca, every Thursday and
Friday at 4 and 6 p.m., Washington Square.
General Courses
[201-202. Bibliography and Methodology of the Study of the
Romance Languages and Literatures. First semester, two hours.]
[203-204. Old Provencal. Readings. Influence of Old Provencal
literature on the other Romance literatures. Second semester, two hours.]
101. Introduction to Phonetics. Elements of Phonetics. Analysis of
the speech-sounds in French and English, with some attention to German,
Italian, and Spanish. The textbooks of Sweet, Passy, Jespersen, and Vie-
tor. First semester, two hours.
Professor Rabcock.
102. Romance Versification. Structure of Romance verse. Second
semester, two hours. Professor Babcock.
French
[205-206. History of the French Language. Introduction to the
historical study of modern French. Phonology and Morphology. Two
hours.]
207-208. Old French Readings. Discussion of the selections in Con-
stans: Chrestomathie de Vancien frangais, and of complete texts. Two hours.
Professor Babcock.
-210. French Literature in the Sixteenth Century. History
of literary ideas during the French Renaissance, The Pleiade. Origins of
classicism. Two hours.]
[211-212. French Literature in the Seventeenth Century. Two
hours.]
[213-214. The Eighteenth Century in France. Society, men and
ideas. Analytical study of representative authors. Two hours.]
215-216. The French Literary Movement in the First Half of
the Nineteenth Century. Origins, development and decline of the
Romantic School. Special study of the novel and the drama during that
The Graduate School 39
period. Pellissier: Le mouvement litteraire au XI Xe siecle; Faguet: Le
dix-nevvieme siScle; Brunetiere: L'Svolution de la poesie lyrique. Two hours.
[217-218. The Fkench Literary Movement in the Second Half of
the Nineteenth Century. The comedy from Dumas to Rostand. New
poetical schools. Evolution of the novel. Two hours.]
Spanish
[219-220. Spanish Literature in the Time of Cervantes. Two hours.]
[221-222. History of the Drama in Spain. Two hours.]
Italian.
[101-102. History of Italian Literature from its Beginnings to the
Middle of the Eighteenth Century. Two hours.] Dr. Racca.
103-104. History of Italian Literature from the Middle of the
Eighteenth Century to the Present. Lectures, readings from represent-
ative authors, and class discussions. Two hours. Thursday, 4-6.
Dr. Racca.
105-106. Dante Alighieri. Study and interpretation of Dante's Di-
vina Commedia and of its relation to the literary, philosophic, political,
social and religious conditions at the end of the Middle Ages and the begin-
ning of the "Rinascimento." Two hours, Friday, 5.30-7.15.
Dr. Racca.
107-108. Gabriele D'Annunzio. Gabriele D'Annunzio's works in prose
and poetry; their relation to the literary, artistic and social life of modern
Italy; their contribution to the progress and perfection of the Italian lan-
guage. Two hours, Friday, 3.45-5.30. Dr. Racca.
All these courses will be conducted as far as possible in Italian.
40 New York University
GROUP III. PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION
Chairman of Group Committee: Professor Robert MacDotjgall, Ph.D.
Secretary of Group Committee: Professor Herman Harrell Horne, Ph.D.
Each candidate for the Doctor's degree must show by a written examination, taking
place not less than seven months before the granting of the degree, a satisfactory
acquaintance with the general history of philosophy and with the elements of logic,
psychology and ethics, and a working knowledge of at least two foreign languages,
to be determined by the department.
DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY
Consultation hours: Professor MacDougall, before or after lecture hours.
Professor Shaw, Friday, 4-6, and Saturday, 9-1; Professor Lough, Wednes-
day, 3-3.45; Saturdays, 9.15-10.15; Professor Horne, Saturday, 9.45-10.15;
Monday, Tuesday, Friday, 3.30-3.45; Dr. Montgomery, Wednesday, 1.45-2;
Dr. Kahn, Thursday, 3.30-5, Library School of Pedagogy; all at Ninth
Floor, University Building, Washington Square.
Systematic Philosophy and History of Philosophy
101-102. The History of Ancient and Mediaeval Philosophy. A
course of lectures on the development of ancient speculation, with readings
from the writings of the leading thinkers. In addition to an analysis of
classic philosophy in the light of antique culture, the course aims to dis-
tinguish between the spirit of Paganism and that of Christianity. Two
hours. Saturday, 9.15-11.15. Professor Shaw.
103-104. History of Philosophy. The work of this course will include
a study, first, of individual men and their contributions; and second, of the
problems and general tendencies of the period. In both cases the devel-
opment of philosophic thought will be considered in its relation to the his-
tory of human knowledge and ideals of life. Systematic reading will be
prescribed in connection with the work. Two hours. Monday, 3.45-5.45.
Professor MacDougall.
[301-302. Seminar in Contemporary Philosophy. An introduction
to the study of recent movements and present tendencies in philosophical
thought. The course will be based upon readings in Bergson and Eucken,
and in the literature of Humanism, Pragmatism and Realism. Historical
relations as well as philosophical significance will be taken into account.
This reading will bring the student into contact with the problems of em-
pirical truth and the moral life as well as those of epistemology and the
The Graduate School 41
theory of reality. In the arrangement of work the special interest of each
student will be taken into consideration. Two hours.] Not given 1914-15.
Professor MacDougall.
201-202. German Idealism. The aim of this course is to trace the
development of German philosophy, beginning with the critical philosophy
of Kant and culminating in the absolute idealism of Hegel. Half the course
will be devoted to a first-hand study of Kant. Emphasis will be laid upon
the wTorld-view which German idealism presents, and accordingly the
application of speculative thought to ethics, religion, aesthetics and law wall
be noted. Two hours. Thursday, 3.45-5.45. Dr. Kahn.
203-204. Logical Theory. The relation to logic of the growth and
structure of language will serve to introduce a review of recent discussions as
to meaning and method in the conceptual w7orld, especially as they affect
the teaching of inductive and deductive logic, and a review of recent
attempts to apply symbolism and mathematics in logical analysis. Two
hours. Wednesday, 2-4. Dr. Montgomery.
[105-106. Advanced Logic. One hour.]
Professor Home.
[107-108. Ethics. A philosophy of life from the standpoint, of ethical
theory. The course presents and criticizes both hedonism and rigorism,
and attempts to develop a third theory in the form of humanism. Two
hours.] Professor Shaw\
[109-110. Systematic Philosophy. This course is pursued with a
twofold aim: to serve as an introduction to the general subject of philosophy
and to provide, for more advanced students, a systematic survey of the
various forms of philosophic activity. Two hours.] Professor Shaw.
205-206. Metaphysics. A study of being viewed as appearance,
activity and reality. This course is pursued with a twofold aim; it seeks
to determine both the nature of the world and the place of the Ego therein.
Two hours. Monday, 3.45-5.45. Professor Shaw.
207-208. Philosophical Seminar. A research course for candidates
for the Doctorate in Philosophy. The course will be devoted to the history
and principles of Ethics. Hours to be arranged. Professor Shaw.
Psychology
209-210. Systematic Psychology. This course undertakes a scien-
tific study of the functions and phenomena of consciousness. Its aim is to
give the student a working conception of mi ad based upon the results of intro-
42 New York University
spective and experimental investigations. The psychological works of
James will be read with special reference to a comparison of his views with
those of other leading psychologists. Two hours. Tuesday, 3.45-5.45.
Professor Lough.
111-112. Psychology of Adolescence. The work of this course will
consist of two parts. In the first term the general features of mental devel-
opment will be studied; in the second the phenomena of the adolescent period
will be considered in detail. Selected literature will be read in connection
with each part of the course. Two hours. Wednesday, 3.45-5.45.
Professor MacDougall.
211-212. Social Psychology. Three general topics are taken up.
First, the psychological self: its essential dependence upon social relation-
ship; reflection of social consciousness in individual judgments; rivalry of
social ideals in self-development. Second, the process of development in
its relation to social factors: suggestion and imitation; inventiveness and
dependence; reaction and opposition. Third, social groups and their char-
acteristics: the mob-consciousness; social delusions and manias; tradition
and caste: social idealizations and their relation to individual action — the
family, class and state; the relation of the social self to the moral and relig-
ious consciousness.
The reading for this course will be selected in connection with each topic
discussed, and upon the report of such literature the class-work will be largely
based. Two horns. Friday, 3.45-5.45. Professor MacDougall.
113-114. Descriptive Psychology. This is a general course in nor-
mal human psychology. The conduct of work, which is based on system-
atic reading, will depend largely on class discussion and include written
themes. Two hours. Saturday, 9.15-11.15. Professor MacDougall.
115-113. Experimental Psychology. The problems, methods, and
results of experimental psychology are presented and subjected to critical
examination. Students have an opportunity of becoming acquainted with
the practical phases of experimentation through laboratory work. Two
hours. Wednesday, 3.45-5.45. Professor Lough.
[301-302. Psychological Seminar. This course is intended for those
having a general interest in the study of mind as well as students in
the special branches of psychology. In it a systematic review is under-
taken of the field of mental science and its applications. The course falls
into three parts: first, a critical examination of the general conceptions and
methods of psychology; second, a study of the divisions of its subject matter
and the special problems with which each branch is concerned; and third,
The Graduate School 43
a consideration of the values of psychology in its various applications to
practical problems. The work of the course will be based upon assigned
reading, reports and class discussions. Two hours.]
Not given 191-1-15.
S4. Reseahch in Experimental Psychology. July 5th- August 13th.
Two hours. Assistant Professor Radosavljevich.
COMPARATIVE RELIGION
117-118. Philosophy of Religion. A constructive study of the
religious principle in mankind. This course asserts the independence of the
religious precinct and endeavors to relate philosophy of religion to other
forms of philosophical culture. Two hours. Saturday, 11.15-1.15.
Professor Shaw.
[213-214. DevelopmEx\tt of Positive Religion. An investigation of
the origin, development and culmination of the religious consciousness.
Special attention is paid to the development of religion in India. Two
hours.] Professor Shaw.
GROUP IV. EDUCATION
Chairman of Group Committee: Professor James E. Lough, Ph.D.
Secretary of Group Committee: Professor Clayton C. Kohl, Ph.D.
Candidates for the Doctor's degree who wish to take their Major in Education,
will be required to pass a preliminary examination in writing at least seven months
before the Commencement at which the degree is to be conferred, which examination
is to include the History of Education, the Principles of Education, Educational Psy-
chology, and two of the foreign languages required to read the literature to be used in
the preparation of the Thesis.
The number of courses required for the degree is discretionary with the Group Com-
mittee, and will vary according to the candidate's previous preparation and the quality
of his work. At least three of the courses required, in addition to the requirements
for the Master's degree, must be courses open to Graduate students only.
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Consultation hours: Professor Lough, Saturday, 9.15-11.15; Friday, 3.30-
4.30; Associate Professor Kohl, Saturday, 11.15-1.15; Friday and Wednes-
day, 3.30-4.30; Professor MacDougall, before or after lectures; Professor
Radosavljevich, Saturday, 12.15-1.15, and before or after lectures; Pro-
fessor Home, Saturday, 9.15-10.15; Tuesday and Monday, 3.30-3.45.
44 New York University
[303-304. Seminar in General Method. One hour. Not given in
1915-16.]
[121-122. Educational Classics — Greek and Roman. One hour.
Not given in 1915-16.] Professor Home.
123-124. Educational Classics — Modern Naturalists. One hour.
Monday, 3.45-4.45. Associate Professor Kohl.
[125-126. Educational Classics — Modern Realists. One hour. Not
given 1915-16.] Professor Home.
127-128. Teacher's Philosophy of Life — Epistemology. One hour.
Tuesday, 4.45-5.45. Professor Home.
139-140. Moral Education. One hour. Saturday, 10.15-11.15.
Professor Home.
217-218. Anthropological Study of School Children. Two hours.
Saturday, 9.15-11.15. Professor Radosavljevich.
133-134. Experimental Didactics. General and Special. Two hours.
Monday, 3.45-5.45. Professor Radosavljevich.
305-306. History of Modern Education. Seminar. Two hours. Fri-
day, 3.45-5.45. (Course Ped. 107-108 is a prerequisite.) Professor Home.
301-302. Seminar in Principles of Education. One hour. Monday,
4.45-5.45. (Course Ped. 101-102 is a prerequisite.)
Associate Professor Kohl.
[315-316 Seminar in Method. One hour. Not given in 1915-16.]
Professor Balliet.
161-162. Principles of Secondary School Education. Two hours.
Thursday, 3.45-5.45. Associate Professor Kohl.
309-310. Seminar in Intelligence of School Children. One hour.
Monday, 10-12 on alternate weeks. Professor Radosavljevich-
307-308. Seminar in School Efficiency Tests. One hour. Saturday,
11.15-12.15. Professor Radosavljevich.
313-314. Research in Pedagogy. Two hours. Friday, 3.45-5.45.
Professor Radosavljevich.
S2. History of Education. July 5 to August 13. Two hours.
Associate Professor Kohl.
The Graduate School 45
S3. Principles of Secondary Education. July 5 to August 13. Two
hours. Associate Professor Kohl.
S23. Seminar in Experimental Didactics. July 5 to August 13. Two
hours. Assistant Professor Radosavljevieh.
GROUP V. SOCIAL SCIENCES
Chairman Group Committee: Professor Marshall S. Brown, M.A.
Secretary Group Committee: Assistant Professor Philip B. Kennedy. M.A.
The degree of Doctor of Philosophy is conferred upon the basis of work successfully
accomplished in regular courses, marked ability in productive research and scholarly
attainment in the general field of the chosen department and its related subjects.
A broad knowledge and a comprehensive grasp of the general field of the department
of the principal subject and a general knowledge of the field of each of two other related
departments approved by the group committee will be required, in addition to a thorough
knowledge of the subject matter of the regular courses and of the special field chosen
by the candidate.
A student enrolling for the Doctor's degree under one of the departments of this
group must elect the seminar and such other courses as are advised by the head of that
department and approved by the chairman of the group. In addition to the courses
taken in the principal subject, this election must include two courses from among those
offered by one or both of two other departments of the group.
An oral examination will be held not less than seven months before the Commence-
ment at which the candidate expects to be presented for the Doctor's degree, upon the
general field of the principal and related subjects, and upon the languages in which
examination must be sustained under the general requirements for the Doctorate
(see p. 17). In addition to this and to the regular course examinations, a final written
examination will be held, subsequent to the acceptance of the Doctoral thesis, upon
the special field of the candidate's principal subject.
DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY
Consultation hours: Professor Brown, Saturdays Sept. 25-Oct. 2, 9.30-
12.30, University Building, Washington Square; Assistant Professor Jones,
Thursday, Sept. 24, and Saturday, Oct. 1, 4-6, P. M., Washington Square.
[101-102. History of the French Revolution and Napoleonic Era.]
To be given in 1916-17. Assistant Professor Jones.
[201-202. History of the Origin and Development of the Consti-
tution of the United States. The aim of this course is to explain the
origin and the development of the constitution and institutions of the
United States and to study the history of the events and movements that
have given to the American body politic its present form. The more im-
portant features of the American government and constitution are traced
46 New York University
from European or Colonial origins through their successive stages of develop-
ment down to the present time. Lectures, collateral reading, reports and
research on special topics. Two hours.] Professor Brown.
203-204. American History prom 1789 to 1828. Au intensive study
of the organization of the federal government and the rise of American
nationality. The leading political and constitutional events and movements
of American history, from the adoption of the Constitution to the victory
of Jacksonian democracy will constitute the subject matter of this course.
Lectures, reading and research and reports upon special topics. Two
hours. Wednesday, 4-6. Professor Brown.
[205-206. American History from 1828 to 1856. The chief political
and constitutional factors in American history, from the rise of the Jack-
sonian democracy to the formation of the Republican party, will consti-
tute the subject matter of this course. Lectures will be supplemented by
parallel readings and by research on assigned special topics. Two hours.]
103-104. The Revolutionary Period in American History. A study
of the causes and course of the American Revolution and of its completion
by the formation of a permanent government for the United States. The
course will deal with the history of the destruction of the political and
governmental relations with Great Britain, with the conduct of the Revolu-
tion, with the government of state and nation during its progress and with
the adoption of the present constitution. Military events will be subor-
dinated to political and constitutional. Lectures will be supplemented by
parallel readings and by research on special topics. Two hours. Saturday,
11.15-1.15. Professor Brown .
[105-106. The Civil War Period in American History. This course
will deal with the causes and history of secession, with the political and
constitutional history of both Federal and Confederate governments during
the war, and with the attempted solutions of the great problems connected
with reconstruction. Lectures, reading and research on special topics.
Two hours.]
[107-108. History of the Renaissance and of the Reformation
in Europe, from the Rise of Italian Humanism to the Close of the
Council of Trent.] Not given in 1915-16. Assistant Professor Jones.
[109-110. The History of France until 1789.] Not given in 1915-16.
Assistant Professor Jones.
111-112. Studies in Mediaeval History. The aim of this course will
be to study in detail, with careful use of the available sources, a few special
fields in the history of Mediaeval Europe. Particular attention will be given
The Graduate School 47
to historical bibliography. Two hours. Thursday, 4-6, University Heights.
Assistant Professor Jones.
113-114. History of Germany. This course will cover in some detail
the History of Germany from the period of the migrations until 1870; the
Prankish period, the conflict with the Papacy, the Reformation, the period
of the Religious Wars, the development of the Prussian monarchy, and the
struggle for unity will all be treated. Two hours. Tuesday, 4-6.
Assistant Professor Jones.
301-302. Seminar in American History. A research course required
of all candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Depart-
ment of History. Two hours. Thursday, 4-6. Professor Brown.
52. Seminar in American History. July 5th- August 13th. One hour.
Professor Brown.
53. English History since the Revolution. July 5th-August 13th.
One hour. Professor Brown.
S5. History of the Napoleonic Period. July 5ih-August 13th. One
hour. Assistant Professor Jones.
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS AND FINANCE
Consultation hours: Professor Johnson, Monday, 3 to 4; Dr. Galloway,
Thursday, 4-6; Assistant Professor Kennedy, daily, 11-1 . University Build-
ing, Washington Square.
101-102. History of Political Economy. The study of the develop-
ment of economic theory, especial attention being given to Smith, Ricardo,
Mill and the Austrian School. Two hours. Monday, 4-6.
Professor Johnson.
[103-104. Money, Banking and Foreign Exchange. An historical
and analytical study of the mechanism of exchange. The evolution of
money and credit and their relation to prices, wages and the rate of interest,
the money market, speculation and the foreign exchanges. Two hours.]
To be given in 1916-17. Professor Johnson.
201-202. Economic Theory. An analysis of the modern theories of
value and distribution. Two hours. Thursday, 4-6.
Assistant Professor Galloway.
105-106. Industrial Evolution. An analysis of the modern theories
of value and distribution. Two hours. Tuesday, 4-6.
Assistant Professor Galloway.
48 New York University
107-108. Economic Statistics. An account of the measurable factors
in the economic life of modern nations such as population, agriculture,
manufactures, mining, commerce, banking, prices, money, wages, etc.
Especial attention will be given to the facts concerning the United States
and the sources of information. The course will include a description of
the methods by which economic statistics are gathered, a discussion of
the accuracy of returns, the limitations on their use, and the pitfalls to be
avoided in statistical interpretation. Two hours. Tuesday, 6.00-7.45,
Dr. Falkner.
109-110. Economics of the War. The European War. Its social
and economic causes, aspects and results. Two hours. Monday, 4-6.
Professor Clapp.
301-302. Seminar in American Industries. The organization and
problems of several selected American industries, including the steel industry,
oil industry, etc. Two hours. Hours to be arranged.
Assistant Professor Kennedy.
DEPARTMENT OF GOVERNMENT
Consultation hours: Professor Jenks, Thursdays, 3.30, and by appoint-
ment; Mr. Loomis, Saturdays, 9.30-10.30; Dr. McLeod, by appointment at
14 Wall Street, at any time between the hours of 10 and 5; Dr. Willis Fletcher
Johnson, Wednesdays, 7 p.m.; Mr. Callan, Saturdays, 1-2 p.m.
101-102. Public Affairs of the City of New York. A laboratory
course given in connection with Course 103-104, 111-112 or 205-206 (two
hours' credit for the two courses). This course covers the practical details
of the administration of the City of New York. Frequent excursions are
made to institutions connected with various City Departments and to other
points of interest. Combined with this work is the instruction of the class
members in the leadership of civic groups to which they are assigned for
the purpose of directing the study of the City Government. Open only to
graduates, unless by special permission of the professor in charge. Given
at Government House, which series as laboratory for the course. Two
hours. Monday, 7.45-9.45.
Professor Jenks assisted by the Director of Government House.
[201-202. History of Political Thought. A study of the develop-
ment of political thought, as shown in the writings of the leading political
thinkers from the earliest time to the present. Besides lectures and a text-
book showing the theories of the different writers and their relations, each
The Graduate School 49
student will be required to make a special study of the writings of some
of the leading thinkers, such as Aristotle, Machiavelli, Bodin, Hobbes,
Montesquieu, Rousseau, and contemporary English and American writers.
Two hours.] Professor Jenks.
301-302. Seminar in Government. A thorough investigation of lead-
ing governmental questions by means of individual reports and detailed
discussions. The Seminar is intended especially for candidates for advanced
degrees, but is open to others who wish to make special investigations par-
ticularly of political and social problems. In 1915-16 it is planned to
make a critical study of the fundamental principles of government. Two
hours. Thursday, 4-6. Professor Jenks .
103-104. Relation of Government to Business. A study of the
direct influence upon business of governments, central and local. The
aim is to show as clearly as may be the value of governmental activity touch-
ing business, to discuss principles that do determine and should determine
the scope of such activity, and that in consequence may determine the atti-
tude of business men towards such governmental action. Leading ques-
tions of the day serve as subjects for special study. Graduate students
will be required to do extra collateral reading and to take in addition the
research course 205-206 described below. Two hours. Thursday, 6-7.45.
Professor Jenks.
105-106. Modern Questions in Politics. A study of leading ques-
tions of the day in the field of politics. The purpose of the course is not only
to give general information but also to show the practical application to the
study of current events of the principles of international law and politics.
The course will be held in the Judson Memorial Building. One-half hour
credit. Fifteen lectures with The University Forum with collateral work
and examination. Friday, 5-6. Professor Jenks.
107-108 American Diplomacy and Foreign Policy. The History
and Methods of American diplomacy from the organization of the Colonies
to the present time. Lectures and conferences. Two hours. Wednesdays,
7-9. Dr. Willis Fletcher Johnson.
109-110. International Law. The nature and development of inter-
national law. The rights and obligations of nations in times of peace. The
arbitration movement. The laws of war and neutrality. America's con-
tribution to international law. Modern questions in international law in
connection with the present war will receive special attention. Two hours.
Tuesdays, 4.45-6.30. Dr. Crecraft.
203-204. Constitutional Law. The principles of American Constitu-
tional Law will be presented by a study of selected cases, with special refer-
50 New York University
ence to contemporary problems and the function of a constitution in a
democracy. McClain's Cases on Constitutional Law will be followed, with
the use of other books for reference. The course is accepted for credit in the
Law School as well as in the Graduate School. Two hours. Saturdays,
2-4. Mr. Callan.
111-112. Municipal Administration. The course will deal with the
functions of city government. It will include a discussion of the following
administrative problems of the modern city: The control of public utilities,
such as local transportation, water, gas and electricity, and markets; housing;
public health; the protection of life and property; the administration of
justice and of corrections; education; recreation; charities; and finance.
Illustrative material will be drawn from the experience and practices of the
leading cities of the United States and Europe. The course will be conducted
by means of lectures and class discussion, based upon reading assignments.
There will be no regular textbook. (Students in the course who are regis-
tered in the Washington Square College will be required to report weekly
upon additional collateral reading. Graduates who desire to receive credit
must, however, register in either Government 101-102 or in Government
205-206, in which a report must be made on a thorough course of investiga-
tion of some assigned topic. Two hours. Wednesday, 7.45-9.45.
Mr. Loomis.
205-206. Research in Government: Federal, State and Municipal.
Special individual investigation will be made into some of the phases of the
administrative activities of the federal, state or city government. The
work will be under the supervision of the instructors, and assisted by the
cooperation of officials. The amount of credit, not to exceed 60 hours, will
depend upon the amount of satisfactory work accomplished. Hours to be
arranged.
Professor Jenks, Mr. Loomis and Dr. McLeod.
113-114. Governments of Europe. This course covers in a compara-
tive way the political institutions of England and some of the more important
Continental European countries with some attention to their historical
development. An attempt will be made to bring out the chief points which
serve to distinguish these systems from the practices of the United States.
Students desiring to complete this course for graduate credit will be required
to complete a satisfactory piece of original research under the direction of
the instructor. Two hours. Tuesday, 6-7.45. Dr. McLeod
115-116. Municipal Finance. The course is intended to give a gen-
eral survey of the financial problems of the modern city. The city budget
The Graduate School 51
will be discussed under the following general headings : Revenues, including
various forms of taxation, such as general property, increment, franchise,
income, and other, the collection and assessment of taxes, local assessments,
and other revenues; the control of expenditures, budgetary procedure, and
methods of economy, the purposes of municipal outlays, indebtedness, and
methods of amortization. Illustrative material will be drawn from the
experience and practices of the leading cities of the United States and Europe.
The course will be conducted by means of lectures and class discussion, based
upon reading assignments. There will be no regular textbook. (Students
in the course who are registered in the Washington Square College will be
required to report weekly upon additional collateral reading. Graduates
who desire to receive credit must register in Government 205-206, in con-
nection with which they will be required to complete, under the direction
of the instructor, a report on a thorough investigation of some appropriate
topic. One hour. Second Term. Tuesday, 7.45-8.45.
Mr. Loomis.
S3. Seminar in Current Political Problems. July 5th-August 13th.
One hour. Dr. McLeod.
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY
Consultation hours: Assistant Professor Binder, September 25, 9-2.30;
September 28, 3-6; September 29, 3-6; through October, Tuesdays, 3-4;
Wednesdays, and Fridays, 3-4; Saturdays, 8.30-9.15 and 1.15-2.00, at
Washington Square.
101-102. Principles of Sociology. The province of sociology; the
elements, structure, forces and control of society; the laws and causes of
progress. Two hours. Saturday, 11.15-1.15. Assistant Professor Binder.
[103-104. Socialism, (a) Forerunners of socialism. The endeavor
toward social amelioration of the sentimental, ethical and revolutionary
reformers, such as Saint Simon, Carlyle, Marx. (6) The Christian
Socialists in Germany, England, and America.
(c) The modern development of Socialism in Europe and America as a
political force, (d) The changing basis of socialism from Utopian to practi-
cal aims. Two hours.] Assistant Professor Binder .
105-106. Anthropology and Folklore. Description of human races;
their distribution over the globe; early human remains; types of languages
and cultures. Primitive man, mental and physical, mythology, morality,
52 New York University
religion and art; castes and their functions; laws and customs; their origin
and development. Special emphasis will be placed upon the psychological
explanation of the great myths of the Greeks, Norsemen, and Finns, and
students will be guided to these and other peoples who developed their
philosophy through myths. Two hours. Friday, 4-6.
Assistant Professor Binder.
201-202. History and Philosophy of Civilization. The natural condi-
tions of civilization, e. g., climate, soil, etc. Material civilization — exploita-
tion of the forces of nature by men. Spiritual civilization — conditions of
mental and moral progress of mankind. Interaction and inter-dependence
of the various factors from prehistoric man to the present. Laws and ten-
dencies shown in the historical development of social organization. Two
hours. Friday, 7-9. Assistant Professor Binder.
[203-204. Individualism. This course is intended to find a working
basis for society between the two opposing conceptions of extreme individ-
ualism and socialism. The history and philosophy of each movement will
be given, and the typical representatives of each treated in detail, e. g.,
Max Stirner, Nietzsche and others for the individualists, Spargo, Bax and
others for the socialists. Inferentially, the conclusion will be established
that a sane, progressive society needs both elements, since each con-
tributes something essential to the social organization. Emphasis will be
laid on the racial and psychological aspects of the two movements. Two
hours.] Assistant Professor Binder.
205-206. Social Efficiency. This course consists of four parts. In
the first, the gradual growth of social consciousness is traced (a) through
religious ideas, e. g., the pantheons of the Greeks and Romans, monotheism,
and the universal church; (b) through political institutions, e. g., the Althing
of the Teutons and the Town Meeting of New England. In the second, the
relation between social organization and social efficiency is examined; the
material used for this purpose being the laws and customs of the Babylonians,
Greeks, Romans, Anglo-Saxons, and Japanese. In the third, the increasing
and deliberate stress laid on social efficiency is emphasized, particularly
among the Germanic and Anglo-Saxon peoples. In the fourth, a critique
is given of the various political systems in relation to social efficiency, and
a comparison made between industrial and cultural conceptions of social
efficiency. Two hours. Saturday, 9.15-11-15. Assistant Professor Binder.
[207-208. The Family and Eugenics. The family is the basic insti-
tution of society, and deeply concerned in all modern improvements — indus-
trial, political, and educational. The first part of the course will give a full
treatment of the family from the historical point of view, e. g., polyandry,
The Graduate School
polygyny, matriarchy, patriarchy, and monogamy; and the religious, ethical,
economic and sociological bearings of each form will be brought out. The
emancipation of women in industry and politics will be taken up in detail.
The second part will treat of the various measures proposed and attempted
for the improvement of the human race, e. g., mating, nutrition, etc. The
conditions necessary for a healthy family life, and the legal difficulties of
preventing the marriage of the mentally and physically unfit will be dis-
cussed. Two hours.]
Assistant Professor Binder.
301-302. Seminar in Sociology. Two hours. Hours to be deter-
mined. Assistant Professor Binder.
Si. Principles of Sociology. July 5th- August 13th. Two hours.
Assistant Professor Binder.
S2. Socialism. July oth-August 13th. Two hours.
Assistant Professor Binder.
GROUP VI. MATHEMATICAL AND PHYSICAL SCIENCES
Chairman Group Committee: Prof. Thomas W. Edmondson, Ph.D.
Secretary Group Committee: Prof. J. Loring Arnold, Ph.D.
General Requirements
1. The language requirement for candidates for the Doctorate is a reading knowl-
edge of French and German.
2. At least ieven months before the commencement at which the degiee is to be
conferred, the candidate will be required to pass a brief preliminary examination in
his major subject, the purpose of which shall be to determine the fitness of the candi-
date to enter upon his last year of work.
3. In the final examination the candidate will be required to show a knowledge
of the general historical development of his major^subject.
Special Requirements
(a) Mathematics. The candidate must complete courses in advanced oalculus,
differential equations, theory of functions, and mechanics (higher course), together
with such other courses as shall be prescribed by the head of the Department of Math-
ematics.
(6) Physics. The candidate must have a knowledge of general chemistry and of
calculus. His subsequent work must include dynamics, a seminar course in general
physics, such specific courses as the Department of Physics may consider appropriate
for his special field of study, and the preparation of a thesis. The subject matter of
these specific courses and of the thesis will be both experimental and theoretical.
'c) Chemistry. Before beginning graduate work in chemistry, the candidate must
be familiar with quantitative analysis and with general physics. He will be expected
54 New York University
to complete thorough courses in each branch of chemistry; he must be familiar with
analytical geometry and calculus; he must take an active part during each year of his
candidacy in the seminar conducted by the department. His thesis will, as a rule, be
of an experimental nature, and must be carried out under the immediate supervision
of some member of the department.
The general subjects in which research work is at present offered in the department
are (1) General and physical chemistry, (2) Analytical chemistry, (3) Inorganic
chemistry.
The final written examination will be divided into four parts: (1) General and
physical chemistry, (2) Analytical chemistry, (3) Inorganic chemistry, (4) Organic
chemistry. The oral examination, in addition to the matter outlined in the general
announcement, will include questions on the special field of the candidate's thesis.
(d) Geology and Geogkaphy.
The candidate will be expected to have a general knowledge of the whole field of
the geological and geographical sciences. The scope of his work in any special field
will depend upon the nature of the research upon which his thesis is based, and will
be determined separately for each candidate.
Admission to the Seminar will be granted only after the student shows a knowledge
of the general history of the science (see Geology II), and some ability in research.
The general lines in which research leading to the Doctorate thesis is at present
offered are (1) Physiography; (2) General Geology, in which emphasis may be laid
upon any non-economic aspect; (3) Economic Geology, including Mining and Engi-
neering Geology.
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS
Consultation hours: Professor Edmondson and Assistant Professor Thorne
at Washington Square, Friday, October 1, 4-6; Saturdays, September 25,
October 2, 9.15-12.15.
101-102. Calculus. A thorough review of the elementary calculus.
Two hours. Saturday, 11.15-1.15. Professor Edmondson.
103-104. Advanced Differential Calculus. Two hours.
Assistant Professor Thorne.
[201-202. Advanced Integral Calculus, and Differential Equa-
tions. Two hours.] Assistant Professor Thorne.
105-106. Higher Plane Curves. Two hours. Hours to be arranged.
Professor Edmondson.
[203-204. Solid Analytic Geometry. Two hours.]
Professor Edmondson.
[205-206. Theory of Functions. Two hours.]
Professor Edmondson.
[207-208. Partial Differential Equations. Two hours.]
Professor Edmondson.
The Graduate School 55
[209-210. Algebraic Invariants. Two hours.]
Professor Edmondson.
[301-302. Seminar. Two hours.] Professor Edmondson.
211-212. Elliptic Functions. Two hours.
Professor Edmondson.
N. B. Course 101-102 is not accepted for credit in a major series.
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS
Consultation hours: Professor Hering, at Washington Square, Fridays,
September 24 and October 1 at 4 p.m.; Saturdays, October 3 and 9 at
11 a.m., other times by appointment; Professor Arnold daily at University
Heights; Dr. Hausman at the Polytechnic Institute, Brooklyn.
201-202. Magnetism and Electricity. A lecture and laboratory course
in dynamo-electric machinery and the commerical current, both direct and
alternating. This course is especially designed for teachers of physics.
Hours to be arranged. Full course. Professor Arnold.
203-204. Magnetism and Electricity. A course in electro-mechanics,
including some modern phases of electric and magnetic theory. A particu-
lar feature is the treatment of electric waves and the development of a
wave theory of transmission lines, with special application to telephone
circuits. Full course. Hours to be arranged.
Professor Arnold and Dr. Hausmann.
205-206. Mechanics, Theoretical and Applied. Full course.
Professor Hering.
[207-208. Mechanics. (Higher Course.)
In Course 207-208 no single textbook is adhered to, references being made
to various standard works. The course is an extension of 205-206, with
reference to the theory of potential, and to dynamics and advanced Statics.
It also takes up the historical development of the science of mechanics. It
is open to those who have taken Course 205-206, or an equivalent course
in mechanics, or have completed the undergraduate course in civil or me-
chanical engineering, and will be given if there are as many as five appli-
cants for it. Full course.] Professor Hering.
101-102. General Physics. For graduates in science, and especially
for teachers of physics who desire a more advanced knowledge of the entire
subject. Treats chiefly of mechanics, properties of matter and heat, with
some attention to sound, light and electricity. Full course.
Professor Hering or Professor Arnold.
56 New York University
103-104. General Physics. Treats chiefly of magnetism and elec-
tricity, sound and light, with some attention to the properties of matter
and heat. Full course. Professor Hering or Professor Arnold.
209-210. Light. The course embraces the fundamental principles of
the theories of light, including electro-mechanics and the electro -magnetic
theory of light. lull course. Professor Arnold.
[301-302. Seminar Course in General Physics. Full course.]
Professor Hering.
Of the courses offered by Professor Hering, only 205-206 and possibly 103-
104 will be open in 1915-16. The usual hour for meeting of classes
during the week is 4.15 on Friday, unless some other hour is chosen by ar-
rangement with the class, the laboratory work being performed, in large
part, on occasional Saturdays during the second semester.
All the above courses except 101-102 require a knowledge of the calcu-
lus, and each course, except 207-208 requires work in the physical labora-
tory, besides written exercises and attendance upon lectures.
DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY
Consultation hours: Professor Hill, Assistant Professor Simmons, Dr.
Farnau, and Dr. Oesper, daily at the Havemeyer Laboratory, University
Heights.
The courses enumerated below are given at the Havemeyer Laboratory,
University Heights, Borough of the Bronx. The laboratory is open daily
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. The student will in general be able to suit his own
convenience in selecting his hours of laboratory attendance. The lectures
will as a rule be given between 4 and 6 p.m. This enables teachers and
others similarly employed in the neighborhood of New York City to attend
these courses.
College graduates with an elementary knowledge of general inorganic
chemistry are admitted to 101-102, which will prepare for 103-104 and this
in turn for the more advanced courses.
Analytical Chemistry
101-102. Qualitative Analysis. Two hundred and fifty laboratory
hours. The course is planned to make the student thoroughly familiar with
the ordinary scheme of qualitative analysis, and to afford some knowledge
of the tests of the rarer elements, with practice in spectroscopic analysis
and dry analysis. Assistant Professor Simmons and Dr. Oesper.
The Graduate School 57
103-104. Quantitative Analysis. Open to students who have com-
pleted 101-102 or its equivalent. Two hundred and fifty laboratory hours.
Assistant Professor Simmons and Dr. Oesper.
(Chemistry 101-102 and 103-104 may be given either as elementary or
as advanced courses; in the former case, they will not be credited toward
degrees in Chemistry.)
201-202. Organic Analysis. Half course. One hundred and twenty-
five laboratory hours. The course will include the usual methods of
ultimate analysis and the determination of the principal organic groups.
Requirements for admission as in Course 105-106.
Assistant Professor Farnau.
Organic Chemistry
203-204. Organic Chemistry. Lectures, two hours weekly. Open to
students who have completed 101-102 or its equivalent. Professor Hill.
105-106. Organic Synthesis. Two hundred and fifty laboratory hours,
devoted to the preparation of a number of typical organic compounds and
the study of important organic reactions. Open to students who have
completed 101-102 and 103-101 or their equivalents and have taken or are
taking Course 203-204. Assistant Professor Farnau.
Theoretical Chemistry
205-206. Physical Chemistry. Lectures, two hours a week throughout
the year. In addition, laboratory work will be given requiring at least 125
hours for its completion. Open to those who have completed Vllb or its
equivalent. Assistant Professor Farnau.
207. Theory of Analytical Chemistry. Half course. Lectures, two
hours weekly. October to February. A development of the theories relating
to analytical chemistry, with particular reference to the theory of solution
and the law of mass action, and a discussion of the methods of qualitative
and quantitative analysis. Professor Hill.
208. Advanced Inorganic Chemistry. Half course. February to June.
Lectures, two hours weekly, on special topics of inorganic chemistry.
Assistant Professor Simmons.
(Courses 207 and 208 will be given in 1915-1916.)
209. Stereochemistry. Half course. October to February. Lectures,
two hours weekly, on the historical development and present status of the
theories of stereochemistry. Professor Hill.
New York University
210. Electrochemistry. Half course. February to June. Lectures and
laboratory work. One lecture weekly, and one hundred and twenty-five
hours of laboratory work. Open to those who have completed V or its
equivalent. Assistant Professor Farnau.
(Courses 209 and 210 will be given 1916-1917.)
211. History of Chemistry. Half course. October to February. Lec-
tures on the development of chemical thought, with essays by the students.
Open to those who have completed VHb or its equivalent.
Professor Hill.
212. Colloid Chemistry. Half course. February to June. Lectures, two
hours weekly, on the chemistry of disperse systems.
(Courses 211 and 212 will be given in 1917-1918.)
Dr. Oesper.
301-302. Seminar. The course will be conducted by all the members
of the department, and will include the study of a series of selected
topics, each under the direction of one of the instructors. The topics will be
varied from year to year. The course is required of all candidates for the
doctorate.
213-214. Research. Properly qualified students may pursue experi-
mental studies in connection with preparation of theses, and may have the
work so done credited as equivalent to other laboratory courses. The
work is to be done under the direction of a member of the department
specially designated for each student.
S8. Research Laboratory Course. July 5th-Augvst 13th. Two hours.
Professors Hill and Simmons.
DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY
101-102. History of Geology and Physiography. This course aims
to give a knowledge of the steps by which we have attained our present
conception of the larger problems in geology and physiography. Half
course. One hour a week of lecture, with collateral reading. Thursday,
5-6. Dr. Earle.
201-202. Discussion of Special Topics. Two hours lecture or con-
ference weekly throughout the year, with library work and a thesis. The
subject matter of the course is divided into three parts: (1) methods of
field work and its reporting; (2) methods of library work, including bibli-
ography and thesis construction; (3) the study of selected problems in Geology
or Physiography, and the recording of these upon lines laid down by the
earlier study. Full course. Friday, 4-6. Professor Woodman.
The Graduate School 59
203-204. Research Course. No formal lectures are given in this course,
the work being done individually by the student. Weekly conferences
are held in which the various members, including the instructor, report
upon the progress of their studies or defend their finished theses. The
subjects may be in physiography or geology, and may require field work
supplemented by office and library study, or only library work. The desires
of members are followed in such choice, as far as their previous training
renders possible. May be counted as one full course, or more; and may be
taken in successive years. Professor Woodman.
301-302. Seminar Course. One half of this course is in general similar
to 203-204, but of a higher order, as is suitable for candidates for a degree.
The work of the student is presented at weekly meetings, and is criticised
by the teaching staff. The other half of the course consists of a study of
fundamental general problems, by library work on the part of the members
and discussion, occasionally lecture, by the instructors. The members of
the course will have charge of the meetings in turn. Two hours. Friday,
8-10 p.m., at University Heights.
Professor Woodman, Assistant Professor Finlay and Dr. Earle.
S20. Seminar in Geography and Geologic Problems. July 5th-
August 13th. One or two hours. Professor Woodman.
GROUP VII. BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Chairman of Group Committee: Prof. Charles L. Bristol, Ph.D.
Secretary of Group Committee: Prof. Holmes C. Jackson, Ph.D.
A candidate for the Doctorate in this group shall possess a good reading knowledge
of German, and one other modern language to be determined by the head of the
department in which his major subject lies.
He shall satisfy his chief instructors that his preparation is adequate in those subjects
that are essential to the special field which he seeks to enter.
At least seven months before the Commencement at which the degree is sought
he will be required to pass a brief preliminary examination in his major subject, the
purpose of which shall be to determine the fitness of the candidate to enter upon hia
last year of work.
DEPARTMENT OF ANATOMY
Consultation hours: Professor Senior, daily in the morning, at the Medical
College.
201-202. Research in Anatomy. Problems in Vertebrate Embry-
ology. Professor Senior.
203-204. Research in Human Anatomy. Adult and Developmental.
Professor Thyng.
60 New York University
DEPARTMENT OF BACTERIOLOGY AND PUBLIC HEALTH
Consultation hours: 11 a.m. Saturdays and by appointment.
Each course in this department will require approximately one fourth
of the student's entire time for the year or half the student's time for a half
year. The lectures and class meetings will be on Saturday mornings at
10 o'clock.
201-202. Hygiene and Applied Bacteriology. Course of thirty lec-
tures and thirty hours of laboratory work and thirty hours of practical field
work in the city. Full course. Professor Park and Special Lecturers.
203-204. Bacteriology. Laboratory exercises and investigations upon
acquired immunity. This course will take up the nature of the different
anti-bodies, the methods of detecting them and measuring their quantity,
and the study of their development and duration in the immunized animals.
Full course. Professor Park and Dr. Noble.
205-206. Bacteriology. A special study on any important group of
bacteria or one bacteriological problem. The subject to be decided upon
after consultation. Full course. Professor Park and Dr. Noble.
DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY
Consultation hours: Professor Bristol at Biological Laboratory, University
Heights, by arrangement.
201-202. Comparative Anatomy. (Laboratory Course.)
Professor Bristol.
203-204. Research in Zoology. (Laboratory Course.)
Professor Bristol.
DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Consultation hours: Daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., at the Medical College Lab-
oratory.
201-202. Biological Chemistry, Research Course.
Professor Mandel.
DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY AND APPLIED
THERAPEUTICS
Consultation hours: Professor Wallace, daily, at the Medical College.
201-202. Pharmacology. Research. Special work on assigned sub-
jects. The laboratory is open for this work all day. Professor Wallace.
The Graduate School 61
203-204. Applied Therapeutics. Hospital and laboratory course, six
hours weekly throughout the year. The therapeutic actions of drugs on
animals is investigated and their application to patients studied.
Professors Wallace and Brown.
205-206. Applied Therapeutics. Research course. Special work, lab-
oratory and clinical, on assigned subjects.
Professors Wallace and Brown.
Those electing Courses 203-204 and 205-206 must have had as a prelim-
inary Courses iu Pharmacology.
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY
Consultation hours: Professor Jackson and Assistant Professor Ewing
daily at the Medical College Laboratories.
101-102. Physiology of Nutrition and Diet Selection. Lecture
course with conferences, open to students who have completed preliminary
work in physiology. Two hours a week, Friday, 3.30-5.30.
Professor Jackson.
103-104. Advanced Physiology. (Laboratory course. Laboratory fee
$15.00.) Hours to be arranged. Professor Jackson.
201-202. Research Work in Physiology. (Laboratory Course. Labor-
atory fee, $20.00.) Hours to be arranged. Professor Jackson.
203-204. Pathological Physiology. (Laboratory course in abnormal
function. Laboratory fee $15.00.) Three hours. Saturdays, 2-5.
Assistant Professor Ewing.
This course is open to students who have completed preliminary lec-
ture and laboratory courses in physiology. Course 101-102 will be given
only upon the application of ten or more students.
Work in physics, biology and chemistry, equivalent to that required for
entrance into the medical department is a prerequisite for all courses in this
department.
DEPARTMENT OF SURGERY
201-202. Pathological Physiology. Open to students with a bach-
elor's and M.D. degree. Dr. John W. Draper.
62 New York University
DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY OF NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
1887-1913
1887
James Creighton Hume. B.A., 1877; M.A., 1879, Princeton University.
Clergyman.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Mindo George Vulcheff. B.A., 1883; M.A., 1886, Princeton University.
Clergyman.
United States Immigration Interpreter, Department of Commerce and Labor. Ellis
Island, N. Y. H.
Charles Ferdinand Dowd.* B.A., 1853; M.A., 1856, Yale University,
Educator.
d. Nov. 12, 1904, Saratoga, N. Y.
Emory Winfield Given. B.A., 1879; Bates College; M.A., 1884, Princeton
University. Educator. Classical Master in the Newark Academy.
530 Ridge St., Newark, N. J.
Robert Crawford Hallock. B.A., 1882; M.A., 1885, Princeton Univer-
sity; D.D., 1900, Richmond College, Ohio. Clergyman. In charge of
Presbyterian Church at Wheatland, N. Y.
Scottsville, N. Y.
Nathaniel Carpenter Hendrickson. B.A., 1880; M.A., 1883; LL.B.,
1884, Columbia University. Lawyer.
47 Canal St., Jamaica, N. Y.
Charles Taylor Pomeroy. B.S., 1877; M.S., 1880, Rutgers College.
Manufacturer. President and Treasurer of the I. Pomeroy Manufac-
turing Co., Newark, N. J.
Bramhall Road, Rahway, N. J.
Samuel Mersereau Woodbridge. B.A., 1877; M.A., 1880, Rutgers
College.
723 Story Building, Los Angeles, Cal.
David Gourley Wylie. B.A., 1879; M.A., 1883, Geneva College; D.D.,
1897, Lafayette College. Clergyman. Pastor, Scotch (Presbyterian)
Church, New York City, 1891-1914; Secretary, Board of Church Erection
of the Presbyterian Church in the United States, 1914~
10 W. 96th St., New York City.
The Graduate School 63
1889
Charles H. Boynton. B.A., 1886, Rochester University; B.D., 1891, Gen-
eral Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Adjunct Professor of Homiletics
and Pedogogy in the Department of Pastoral Theology, General Theological
Seminary, New York City.
129 Engle St., Englewood, N. J.
Jesse Wendell Brooks. B.A., 1881; M.A., 1884, Rutgers College, Graduate
of Union Theological Seminary, 1884. Clergyman. Director, Chicago
Tract Society. President, Union Missionary Training Institute, Brook-
lyn, N. Y., 19U-
131 Waverly Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
James Clarence Jones. B.S., 1886, Hobart College; graduate of General
Theological Seminary, New York City, 1889. Clergyman. Rector, St.
Mary's Protestant Episcopal Church, Brooklyn.
230 Classon Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
John Shields Kennedy. B.A., 1886; LL.B., 1887; M.A., 1888, New York
University. Lawyer.
Red Hook, N. Y.
Henry M. Livingston.* B.S., 1877, New York University, B.D., 1880.
Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman.
d. July 9, 1890, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Adam McClelland. M.A., 1866; D.D., 1879, New York University;
Clergyman.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Jonathan Magie Meeker. B.A., 1873, Wesley an University, Connecticut;
B.D., 1880, Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. President, Cen-
tenary Collegiate Institute, Hackettstown, N. J., 1908-
Hackettstown, N. J.
Peter Houston Milliken. B.A., 1876; M.A., 1879; D.D., 1879, Rutgers
College. Clergyman. "Pastor for Strangers" in Marble Collegiate
Church (Reformed), New York City.
1 W. 29th St., New York City.
Carl Leopold Spethmann. B.A., 1877; M.A., 1880, Princeton University.
20 Lawn Rg. Road, Orange, N. J.
Martyn Summerbell. B.A., 1871; M.A., 187 4, College of the City of New
York; D.D., 1889, Union Christian College; LL.D., Elon College, 1909.
Educator. President, Palmer Institute (Starkey Sem.), Lakemont, N. Y.
Lakemont, N. Y.
64 New York University
1890
Charles O. Dewey.* B.A., 1885; M.A., 1888, Syracuse University. Edu-
cator. Principal, Public School No. 136, Brooklyn, N. Y.
d. August 13, 1914, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Allison Drake. B.A., 1886; M.A., 1887, St. Xaviers College, Cincinnati.
Henry H. Hutton.* B.A., 1857; M.A., 1860, Syracuse University.
d. 1908, New Jersey.
Joseph J. Lampe. B.A., 186 hi M.A., 1867; B.J)., 1889, Knox College.
Clergyman. Professor of Old Testament Languages and Literature,
Omaha Theological Seminary, 1895.
Omaha, Nebraska.
Isaac Coriell Pierson.* B.A., 1865; M.A., 1868, New York University.
Thesis: "Life Insurance and Applied Science." Actuary. Member,
1890-1908; Secretary, 1895-1908, Council of New York University.
d. Sept. 10, 1908, New York City.
Addison Brown Poland. M.A., 1876, Wesley an University. Educator.
Superintendent of Schools, Newark, N. J.
258 Montclair Ave., Newark, N. J.
Edward Richard Shaw.* Ph.B., 188 kl M.A., 1886, Lafayette College.
Educator. Dean of the School of Pedagogy, New York University, 189 1^-
1901.
d. Feb. 11, 1903, Yonkers, N. Y.
Henry Hale Sleeper, (name changed to Gifford in 1909). B.A., 188 k;
M.A., 1887, Princeton University; B.D., 1913, General Theological Sem-
inary. Clergyman. Rector, St. James' Church, Piscataway, N.J.
Woodbridge and Maple Aves., New Brunswick, N. J.
1891
Samuel L. Beiler. B.A., B.D., 1877; Ph.D., 1891, Boston University;
M.A., 1882, Ohio, Wesley an University. Clergyman. Professor of
Pastoral and Historical Theology, University of Southern California.
Redlands, Cal.
Cornelius Ryckman Blauvelt. B.A., 186^: Union Theological Seminary,
1867; M.A., 1871, New York University. Clergyman.
100 S. Broadway, Nyack, N. Y.
Arcturus Z. Conrad. B.A., 1882; M.A., 1885, Carleton College. Clergy-
man. Pastor, Park Street Congregational Church, Boston, Mass.
Hotel Westminster, Boston, Mass.
The Graduate School 65
George Taylor Ettinger. B.A., 1880; M.A., 1883, Muhlenberg College.
Educator. Dean of the Faculty of Muhlenberg College.
435 Union St., Allentown, Pa.
James Winthrop Hageman. B.A., 1872; M.A., 1875, Princeton University.
Ballston Spa, N. Y.
John Haddaeus.* Worms-on-Rhine Gymnasium. B.D., 1884-. Meadville
Theological School. Clergyman.
d. Dec. 25, 1913, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Thomas J. Jones. B.A., 1888, Ripon College. Graduate of Union Theologi-
cal Seminary, New York City, 1891. Clergyman. Missionary to Shais-
baganj, ABR, India, 1907-1909.
William J. Leggett. B.A., 1872; M.A., 1875, Rutgers College. Clergy,
man. Pastor, Reformed Church, Chatham, N. Y.
Chatham, N. Y.
Charles Eugene MacChesney. B.A., 1883; M.A., 1886, University of
Vermont; LL.B., 1892; LL.M., 1893, New York University. Educator.
Head Master, Paterson Classical Institute.
33 Church St., Paterson, N. J.
Burtis Cunningham Magie. B.A., 1872; M.A., 1875, Princeton Univer-
sity; LL.B., 187 h University of Michigan; Pd.D., 1892, New York Uni-
versity. Educator. Principal of Public School No. 18, Manhattan,
New York City.
121 E. 51st St., New York City.
John Howard Mahany. Educated at Bandon Training College, Cork,
Ireland. Educator. Former Head Master, Trinity Chapel School, New
York City.
630 W. 139th St., New York City.
Alexander Harris McKinney. B.A., 1881; M.A., 1887, College of the
City of New York. Clergyman. Assistant Superintendent, New York
City Mission and Tract Society.
105 E. 22d St., New York City.
Charles Wesley Millard.* B.A., 1867; M.A., 1870, Wesleyan Univer-
sity. Clergyman.
d. 1905, Yonkers, N. Y.
James Alexander Miller. B.A., 1888, New York University. Clergyman.
Pastor, Presbyterian Church, Elmira, N. Y.
209 Franklin St., Elmira, N. Y.
66 New York University
Thomas S. O'Brien. B.A., 1870; M.A., 1871; LL.D., 190b, St. Francis
Xavier College. Educator. Associate City Superintendent of Schools.
New York City.
Board of Education, 59th St. & Park Ave., New York City.
Prescott Boyle Vail.* B.A., 1877; M.A., 1880, Princeton University.
d. 1900.
William T. Vlymen. B.A., 1881; M.A., 1884, Princeton University. Edu-
cator. Associate Superintendent of Schools. Principal, Eastern District
High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
379 Front St., Hempstead, L. I.
George Callen Whyte. M.A., 1887, New York University.
St. Andrews University, Scotland.
1892
Lewis Wyckliffe Barney. B.A., 188 Jf, College of the City of New York;
M.A., 1891, New York University. Clergyman. Pastor, Ainslie Street
Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Kersey S. Blake. B.A., 1865; M.A., 1878, Oberlin College. Educator.
Principal of School in Newark, N. J.
524 Ridge St., Newark, N. J.
James Boyd Brady.* B.D., 1869, Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman.
d. July 20, 1912, Boston, Mass.
Mary B. Dennis. B.S., 1881; M.S., 1887, Daughter's College.
William Byron Forbush. B.A., 1888, Dartmouth College; Litt.D., 1895,
Hanover College. Clergyman. Pastor, North Church (Congregational),
Detroit, Mich.
171 Taylor Ave., Detroit, Mich.
Herbert H. Gadsby. B.A., 1886, Cornell University. Educator. Prin-
cipal, Dewey High School, North Adams, Mass.
North Adams, Mass.
John Handley. B.A., 1883; D.D., Rutgers College; M.A., 1891, New York
University. Clergyman.
75 Pilgrim Pathway, Ocean Grove, N. J.
Carl F. Kaysbr. Gymnasium of Rastatt, Baden, and Universities of Heidel-
berg and Basel. Educator. Professor of German Language and Litera-
twe, Norvial College of the City of New York.
71 E. S7th St., New York City.
The Graduate School 67
Charles Ellsworth MacGinnes. B.A., 1887; M.A., 1890, Princeton
University. Clergyman. Pastor of Whitehall Presbyterian Church,
Whitehall, N. Y.
Whitehall, N. Y.
Thomas Calvin McClelland. B.A., 1889; M.A., 1891; D.D., 1906, New
York University, graduate, 1892, Union Theological Seminary. Clergy-
man and Author.
97 Johnson St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
John Berridge McCuish. B.A., 1887, Park College; M.A., 1889, Prince-
ton University. Clergyman. Pastor, Presbyterian Church at Newton,
Kansas.
Newton, Kansas.
Henry Patrick O'Neil.* B.A., 1860; M.A., 1863; LL.B., 1873, Columbia
University. Educator.
Deceased.
William Augustus Sadtler. B.A., 1883; M.A., 1886, Muhlenberg Col-
lege. Educator. Head of Department of English, Midland College,
Atchison, Kansas.
926 S. 5th St., Atchison, Kansas.
Elmer Charles Sherman. B.A., 1882; M.A., 1885, Hamilton College,
Educator. Superintendent of Schools.
Englewood, N. J.
l893
Anson Phelps Atterbury. Student at Yale, 1871-73 and 1875-76, Ando-
ver Theological Seminary, 1876-78; graduate of Union Theological Sem-
inary, 1879; D.D., Hamilton College, 1879. Thesis: "Present Social
Conditions in Norway." Clergyman. Pastor, Park Presbyterian Church,
New York City.
145 W. 86th St., New York City.
Edward Mark Deems. B.A., 187k; M.A., 1877, Princeton University,
graduate of Princeton Theological Seminary, 1877; D.D., 190 %, Alfred
University. Thesis: "The Ghost Theory of the Origin of Religion."
Clergyman. Chaplain, American Seaman's Friend Society.
507 West St., New York City.
William Daniel Grant. University of Toronto and Knox College. Grad-
uate of Union Theological Seminary, 1887. Thesis: "Agnosticism."
Clergyman. Pastor, Northumberland Presbyterian Church, Northumber-
land, Pa.
Northumberland, Pa.
68 New York University
Theodorus Bailey Hascall. B.A., 1865; M.A., 1885, Williams College.
Thesis: "Christianity and the Pagan Schools of the First Three Centuries."
Educator. Instructor, Newark, N. J. High School.
191 Broad St., Newark, N. J.
Robert Blair Keyser. B.A., 1855; M.A., 1858, College of the City of New
York; LL.B., 1865, Columbia University. Thesis: "The Philosophy of
David Hume." Journalist.
Utica, N. Y.
Benjamin Franklin Kidder. B.A., 1881; M.A., 188^, Wesleyan Univer-
sity; Ph.D., 1891, Syracuse University. Thesis: " The Genesis of Mono-
theism." Clergyman. Pastor, Grace Church (M.E.), Bay Ridge, Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
Ovington Ave., Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Hulit Lawrence. B.A., 1871; M.A., 187b; D.D., Rutgers Col-
lege. Thesis: "Influence on the German of the Scottish Philosophy."
Clergyman. Pastor, (M.E.) Church, Southold, N.Y.
Southold, N. Y.
Robert Huston McCready. B.A., 1879, Western University of Pennsyl-
vania. Thesis: "Augustine's Psychology." Clergyman.
295 E. Ridgewood Ave., Bidgewood, N. J.
Henry Theodore McEwen. B.A., 1878, Western Reserve University;
DD., 189k, New York University. Thesis: "God in Human Thought."
Clergyman. Pastor, Second Presbyterian Church, Amsterdam, N. Y.
Amsterdam, N. Y.
John J. McNulty.* B.S., 1881, College of the City of New York; M.S.,
1892, New York University. Thesis: "Influence of Economic Ideas on
English Political Development." Educator. Professor of Moral and
Intellectual Philosophy in the College of the City of New York.
d. May, 1908, New York City.
Rockwood MacQuestion. B.A., 1863; M.A., 1866, Columbia, B.A., 1863;
M.A., 1866, Columbia University. Thesis: "Higher Criticism and Out-
growth of Spinozaism." Clergyman. Member of Brooklyn Presbytery,
1912.
1673 Eastburn Ave., Bronx, New York City.
Lindsay Parker. M.A., 1890, Rutgers College; M.A., 1891, New York
University. Thesis: "Gautama Buddha and Jesus Christ as Moral
Teachers." Clergyman. Pastor, Amity Baptist Church,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School 69
Daniel Redmond. B.A., 1889, Westminster College. Thesis: "Monism
a Philosophic Tendency." Clergyman. Pastor, Presbyterian Church,
Avoca, N. Y.
Avoca, N. Y.
Ernest Voorhis. Class of 1880, Princeton University; Graduate of General
Theol. Sem.y 1885; M.A., 1891, New York University. Thesis: "A study
of C. Velleius Pater cuius." Clergyman. Head Master, Cathedral Choir
School, and Canon Precentor, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York
City.
526 W. 114th St., New York City.
Edwin G. Warner. B.A., 1885, Amherst College. Thesis: " The study of
Latin in Secondary Schools." Educator. Head of Latin Department in
Polytechnic Preparatory School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
56 Montgomery Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
La Selle Hayden White. B.A., 1881, Yale University. Thesis: "Phil-
osophy of Judgment as Portrayed in Shakespeare' s 'Merchant of Venice.' "
Educator. Principal of Public School No. 3, Brooklyn, N. Y.
9 Revere Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Arthur Lester Wolfe. B.A., 1889, New York University. Thesis:
"Roman Commerce Prior to the First Punic War." Educator. Professor
of Latin Languages and Literature in Park College.
Park College, Parkville, Mo.
1894
Clark Mills Brink. B.A., 1879; M.A., 1893, University of Rochester;
Graduate of Rochester Theological Seminary, 1882. Thesis: " The Histor-
ical Development of the Personification of Evil." Clergyman and Educa-
tor. Pastor, First Baptist Church, Des Moines, Iowa, 1882-88; Roseville
Baptist Church, 1888-92; Professor of English in Kalamazoo College,
1895-1901. Dean and Professor of English, Kansas State Agricultural
College, Manhattan, Kansas, 1902-
9 Park Road, Manhattan, Kansas.
Jesse Franklin Forbes. B.A., 1874; M.A., Amherst College; Graduate
of Union Theological Seminary, 1877; D.D., 1906, Bellevue College
(Nebraska). Thesis: "Plato's Idea of God." Clergyman. Pastor,
Adams Memorial Church (Presbyterian), New York City. Moderator,
Presbytery of New York.
103 E. 29th St., New York City.
70 New York University
Ivory Franklin Frisbee. B.A., 1880; M.A., 1883, Bates College; M.A.,
1903, Harvard University. Graduate of Sprague Correspondence School
of Law, 1910; admitted to Suffolk (Mass.) Bar in 1912. Thesis: "Greek
in Secondary Schools." Lawyer.
39 Rutland Square, Boston, Mass.
Eleander Stiles Jamison. B.A., 1891, Baldwin University. Thesis:
" The non-Biblical Faiths Represented at the Parliament of Religions and
their Contrasts with Christianity," Clergyman. Pastor, (M.E.) Church,
Andover, N. J.
Parsonage of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Andover, N. J.
Frank Bergen Kelley. B.A., 1890; M.A., 1892, New York University.
Thesis: "Rise and Development of English Metrification." Educator.
Instructor in History and Civics in DeWitt Clinton High School, New
York City.
455 Madison Ave., Elizabeth, N. J.
(Ora) Alexander Lewis.* M.S., 1892, New York University; D.D., 1906,
Dewey College. Thesis: " The Supremacy of Christian Ethics." Clergy-
man. Pastor of churches (Congregational) in New York City, Brooklyn
and Worcester, Mass., 1890-1904-; First Congregational Church, St.
Louis, Mo., 1905-12.
d. March 7, 1912, St. Louis, Mo.
Louis Dwight Ray. Ph.B., 1879; Ph.M., 1882, Syracuse University.
Thesis:" Atlantis, A Study in Plato." Educator. Head Master, Irving
School, New York City.
35 W. 84th St., New York City.
Jay Nathaniel Taft. Ph.B., 1879; Ph.M., 1882, Syracuse University.
Thesis: "Aryan Theism and Its Revival in Recent Times." Clergyman.
56 Lancaster Ave., Syracuse, N. Y.
l895
George Donaldson. B.L., 1888, Cornell University. Thesis: "Early
Translations of the Old Testament." Educator. Instructor in Washing-
ton Irving High School, New York City.
Cliffside, N. J.
Martin Luther Gates. M.D., 1868, American University (York, Pa.);
M.A., 1892, New York University. Thesis: "Different Theories Concern-
ing the Nature of Primitive Religions."
George Armstrong Liggett. B. A., 1889, Rutgers College. Thesis: "The
Philosophy of Spencer, Huxley and Bain is the Philosophy of Unqualified
Materialism." Clergyman.
Orchard Ave., Richmond Hill, L. I.
The Graduate School 71
DeWitt Lincoln Pelton. B.A., 1898, Coe College; M.A., 1890, Princeton
University. Thesis: " The Church and Social Reform." Clergyman.
Rector, St. James (Fordham) Protestant Episcopal Church.
Jerome Ave. and 190th St., New York City.
Chaeles H. Tyndall. B.D., 1885, Auburn Theological Seminary; M.A.,
1893, New York University. Thesis: " Nature as a Medium in the
Revelation of Spiritual Truth." Clergyman. Pastor, R. D. Church,
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
137 S. 6th Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
1896
Henry Lewis. B.A., 1893; M.A., 1895, New York University. Thesis:
"The Influence of Plato upon Early Christian Thought." Clergyman.
With American Tract Society, 150 Nassau St., New York City, since 1898.
Editor, American Messenger.
601 10th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Farqtjhar David McRae. B.A ., 1887, Park College; M.A ., 1893, New York
University. Thesis: "Spencer's Moral Theory." Clergyman. Pastor,
Macalester Presbyterian Church, St. Paul, Minnesota.
St. Paul, Minn.
Aethur Cecil Perry, Jr. B.S., 1892; M.S., 1894, New York University.
Thesis: "State Control of Railways." Educator. Principal, Public
School No. 85, Brooklyn, N. Y.
163 Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
1897
John Campbell. B.A., 1888, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1890,
Columbia University. Grad., 1894, General Theological Seminary.
Thesis: "The Song of Deborah." Clergyman. Pastor, Church of the
Mediator (Protestant Episcopal).
Kingsbridge Ave. and 231 St., Bronx, New York City.
George Peck Eckman. M.A., 1891, Wesleyan University; B.D., 1886, Drew
Theological Seminary; M.A., 1894, New York University; D.D., 1902,
Syracuse, 1906, Wesleyan. Thesis: "Controversial Elements in Lucre-
tius." Clergyman. Editor, Christian Advocate, New York City.
106 Prospect Ave., Summit, N. J.
William Landon Felter. B.A., 1883, College of the City of New York.
Thesis: " The Evolution of the Essay." Educator. Principal of Girls'
High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
996 Sterling Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
72 New York University
Julius W. Knapp. B.A., 1879, Muhlenberg College. Thesis: "Indiscrim,-
inate Charity" Clergyman.
12 North Parade, Buffalo, N. Y.
Walter Laidlaw. B.A., 1881; M.A., 1886, University of Toronto. Thesis:
"A Christian Propaedeutic." Clergyman. Executive Secretary, Federa-
tion of Churches and Christian Organizations, New York City.
Spuyten Duyvil, N. Y.
Edwin Lawrence Sargent.* B.A., 1868; M.A., 1871, Harvard Univer-
sity. Thesis: "Compulsory Education." Educator. Instructor in Latin,
Latin School, Cambridge, Mass.
d. Feb. 12, 1907, Cambridge, Mass.
Charles Gray Shaw. B.L., 1894, Cornell University; Ph.M., 1896, New
York University; B.D., 1879, Drew Theological Seminary. Thesis:
"Deism; with a Bibliography of the Principal Works of the Deistic Con-
troversy from Hobbs to Hume." Educator. Professor of Ethics and
Assistant Professor of Philosophy, New York University.
University Heights, New York City.
1898
Henry Townsend Beatty. B.A., 1887; M.A., Lafayette College. Thesis:
" The Existence of God, or a Contention for a Unitary, Intelligent and Per-
sonal World-ground." Clergyman. Pastor, First Presbyterian Church,
Hoboken, N. J. Lecturer.
1239 Bloomfield St., Hoboken, N. J.
William Lawrence A. Dalton. B.S., 1893, College of the City of New York;
M.S., 1896, New York University. Thesis: "Experimental Studies in
Association and Memory." Physician, New York City.
149 E. 63rd St., New York City.
Charles Wesley McCormick. B.A., 1881; M.A., 188b Wesleyan Univer-
sity; M.A., 189k, New York University; D.D., 1879, Syracuse Univer-
sity. Thesis: " The Ethics of Homer." Clergyman. Pastor, Nostrand
Avenue Church (M.E.), Brooklyn, N. Y. Lecturer on Methodist History
and Polity, Hartford Theological Seminary.
479 Green Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Andrew Oliver, Jr. B.A. * 1891; M.A., 1895, Harvard University. Thesis:
"Observations on the Use of Certain Prepositions in Petronius." Educa-
tor. Professor of Latin, Broadway High School, Seattle, Wash. Presi-
dent, Classical Association of the Pacific Northwest, Vice-President,
Washington State Philological Society.
The Broadway High School, Seattle, Wash.
The Graduate School 73
George Palmer Pardington. B.A., 1893; M.A., 1895, New York Uni-
versity. Thesis: " The Origin of the Israelitish Kingship." Educator.
Librarian; Professor of Church History, Practical Theology and New Testa-
ment Greek Exegesis in the Bible and Missionary Institute of the Nyack-
Schools of the Christian and Missionary Alliance.
Nyack, N. Y.
1899
Frank Simpson Cookman. B.A., 1879; M.A., 1882, Wesleyan University;
B.D., 1882, Drew Theological Seminary. Thesis: "What is the Jehovah
Cult of the Early Samaritans?" Clergyman. Curate, St. Thomas's
Church {Protestant Episcopal), New York City.
53rd St. and Fifth Avenue, New York City.
Alice B. Dudek. Lit.B., 1895, New Windsor College; Ph.M., 1896, New
York University. Thesis: " The Source of the National Epic, Beowulf."
Educator. Professor of English in DeWitt Clinton High School, New York
City.
135 W. 58th St., New York City.
Frederick Wood Everleth. B.A., 1862; M.A., 1892, Dartmouth Col-
lege; M.A., 1893, New York University. Thesis: "La Novela Picaresca."
Educator. Principal, Grammar School No. 22, Jersey City.
585 Bergen Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
Arnold Winkelried Fismer. B.A., 1898, Columbia University. Thesis:
"Relation of Ethics to Religion." Educator. Clergyman. Editor.
Professor of Theology, Bloomfield Seminary.
302 Belleville Ave., Bloomfield, N. J.
Finley Milligan Foster. B.A., 1876, University of Indiana. Thesis:
" Church and State." Clergyman. Pastor, Reformed Presbyterian Church,
New York City.
335 W. 39th St., New York City.
Edmund Lyman Hood. B.D., 1885, Yale University; M.A., 1896, Univer-
sity of California. Thesis: " The Greek Church in America." Clergyman.
President, and Professor of Church History, Atlanta Theological Seminary.
Atlanta, Ga.
Jacob Mandel. Berlin University, 1886. Thesis: "The Agricultural
Pictures and Metaphors in the Poetical Books of the Old Testament."
Clergyman.
Johan (Hans Henry) Spoer. Crefeld, Real Schule; M.A., 1898, New York
University. Thesis: " The Telragrammaton and Its Interpretation Jahre."
Clergyman. Curate, St. Peter s, Wolverhampton, England.
53 Bath Road, Wolverhampton, England.
74 New York University
1900
George William Carter. B.A., 1892, M.A., 1899, Wesleyan University;
B.D., 1893, Drew Theological Seminary; M.A., 1899, Yale University.
Thesis: "A Comparison between Zoroastrianism and Judaism" Clergy-
man. General Secretary, New York Bible Society.
Room 66, Bible House, Fourth Ave. and 9th St., New York City.
Laurell Wesley Demeritt.* B.A., 1897, New York University. Thesis:
" The Return from Exile and the Building of the Second Temple." Clergy-
man. Asst. Pastor, 2nd Presbyterian Church, Albany, N. Y., 1900-01.
d. Feb. 1, 1901.
William Wright Fisher. B.A., 189^, Wesleyan University; M.A., 1898>
New York University. Thesis: "A Comparison of the Leading God Ideas
of Aeschylus and Sophocles." Educator. Instructor in English in the
Brooklyn Boys' High School.
828 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Hugo W. Hoffman. B.A., 1882, Union College; M.A., 1899, New York
University. Thesis: "A Compilation of Old Testament Expressions
Concerning Death." Clergyman. Pastor, St. Paul's Lutheran Church,
(S. 5th Street), Brooklyn, N. Y.
306 Rodney St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Harry Cates Krowl. B.A., 1895, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1898, New York University. Thesis: " The Evolution of Oratorical Form."
Educator. Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature, Col-
lege of the City of New York.
335 W. 14th St., New York City.
Jacob W. Loch. Basel Gymnasium (Germany); Bloomfield Theological
Seminary; M.A., 1899, New York University. Thesis: " Eschatological
Questions According to the Psalms." Clergyman. Pastor, German
Evangelical Lutheran Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.
59 Schermerhorn St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Eleanor P. Lumley. B.A., 1896, M.A., 1899, Dennison University; M.A.,
1899, New York University. Thesis: " The Influence of Plautus on the
Comedies of Ben Jonson." Educator. Instructor in Latin and Greek,
Girls' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
154 Halsey St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
1901
Andrew Beattie. B.A., 1881*, Toronto University. Grad., 1888, Union
Theological Seminary. Thesis: "Confucianism" Clergyman. Pastor,
Calvary Presbyterian Church, Berkeley, California.
Berkeley, Cai.
The Graduate School 75
Ernst Brennecke. Proseminary, Kropp, Germany; Gymnasium at Meine,
1885; M.A., 1900, New York University. Thesis: "Das Zeugnis der
Theophoren Eigennames des alien Testaments fuer die Entwiekelung des
Isralitischen Gottesbegriffs." Clergyman. Pastor, Trinity Church {Luth-
eran), New York City.
168 W. 100th St., New York City.
George Alexander McKallip Dyess. B.A., 1881/., Pennsylvania College.
Thesis: " The Struggle in New York over the Adoption of the Constitution."
Educator.
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Lillian Kupfer. B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1899, New York University. Thesis: " Greek Foreshadowings of Modern
Metaphysical Thought." Editor. Editorial Work for American Book
Company, New York City.
44 W. 97th St., New York City.
1902
Eric Bostroem. B.A., 1896; M.A., 1898, New York University. Thesis:
"De Vocabulis Graecis apud Plautum." Government Clerk. Clerk in
Post Office Department, Washington, D.C., in Charge of Russian Work of
Money Order Division, International Section.
2013 I St. N. W., Washington, D. C.
Charles Theodore Hock. Royal Friedrichs Gymnasium, Kessel, Ger-
many, 1888-1891; M.A., 1898, New York University; D.D., 1910, Bloom-
field Theological Seminary. Thesis: "Grunde fur die Entstehung der
Messianischen Weissagung in Israel." Clergyman. Professor of Classics
and Hebrew, Bloomfield Seminary. Member of Teachers' Examining
Board for Public Schools of Bloomfield, N. J.
222 Liberty St., Bloomfield, N. J.
Carrie Elizabeth Logan. B.A., 1895, Hunter College of the City of New
York; M.A., 1900, Neiv York University. Thesis: ((A Criticism of the
Psychology of Schopenhauer." Author.
Charleston, Kitsap County, Washington.
George Howard Opdyke. Ph.B., 1890, Wesleyan University; M.A., 1891,
Columbia University. Studied Law in Columbia Law School, admitted to
Georgia Bar in 1893. Thesis: " The Operations of Foreign Exchange."
Lawyer and Capitalist. President, Oregon Lumber and Navigation Co.,
the Rector Gas Lamp Co., the New South Mining and Development Co.;
Vice-President, Yreka and Scott Valley R. R. Co., Farnham Cheshire
Lime Co.
131 W. 31st St., New York City.
76 New York University
1903
Risq G. Haddad. B.A., 1890, Syrian Protestant College of Beirut; M.D.,
1901, New York University. Thesis: "Development of Arabic Poetry."
Physician.
56 Garden Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Sarah Jane McNary. B.A., 1890, Wellesley College; M.A., 1892, New York
University. Thesis: "Studies in Layamon's Verse." Educator. Head
of Department of English, State Normal School, Trenton, N. J.
State Normal School, Trenton, N. J.
William James Noble.* B.A., 1897; M.A., 1899, Brown University. The-
sis: " The Intellectualistic Theory of the Soul" Clergyman.
d. Nov. 27, 1913, Montclair, N. J.
James Palmer. B.A., 1887, Washington and Jefferson College. Thesis:
" The Practical Content of the Ontological Proof of the Existence of God."
Clergyman. Pastor, Manor Church, Branch of South Church (Reformed),
New York City.
350 W. 26th St., New York City.
1904
Gustav Arnold Carstensen. B.A., 1873, Eobart College; M.A., 1902, New
York University. Thesis: " The Relation of 'Qoheleth' to Contemporary
Greek Philosophy." Clergyman. Rector, Christ Church (Protestant
Episcopal), River dale, N . Y.
Riverdale Ave. and 252nd St., New York City.
Orrok Paul Colloque. B.A., 1899, Trinity College, M.A., 1901, New York
University. Graduate of General Theological Seminary, New York City,
1902. Thesis: "The Concept Purpose." Clergyman. Vicar of St.
James' Church, Old Town, Maine.
Old Town, Me.
Joseph C. Freehoff. B.S., 1891, University of Wisconsin. Thesis: " Value
of Money." Statistician. Sanitary Inspector, New York City.
557 W. 124th St., New York City.
Julius Gottlieb. B.A., 1901, M.A., 1903, New York University. Thesis:
"Et Cicero et Cornificius in Artibus Rhetoricis Componendis Communi
Graeco Auctori usi sunt."
48 Hudson Place, Weehawken, N. J.
Joseph Kahn. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1903,
New York University. Thesis: "Spinoza's Idea of God." Educator.
Instructor, High School of Commerce, New York City; Instructor in Phi-
losophy, New York University Graduate School.
860 E. 161st St., New York City.
The Graduate School 77
Livingston Rowe Schuyler. B.A., 1889; M.A., 1893, College of the City
of New York; B.D., 189k, General Theological Seminary. Thesis: " The
Liberty of the Press in the American Colonies." Educator. Assistant
Professor of History, College of the City of New York.
567 W. 139th St., New York City.
Alexis Eugene Senftner. B.A., 1899, Columbia University; M.A., 1902,
New York University; B.D., 1902, Union Theological Seminary. Thesis:
" To What Extent have the Two Works 'De Invention^ and 'Ad Herennium'
a Common Origin?" Educator. Principal, Senftner Preparatory School,
New York City; Instructor in Latin, College of the City of New York.
428 W. 154th St., New York City.
Maurice Thorner. B.A., 1892, College of the City of New York. Thesis:
"Poor and Rich in the Old Testament, with a Study of 'Ts'dakali' in the
Bible and Rabbinical Literature." Clergyman. Rabbi, Park Avenue
Temple, Bridgeport, Conn.
1806 North Ave., Bridgeport, Conn.
1905
Ernest Darwin Daniels. B.A., 1890; M.A., 189k, Amherst College.
Thesis: " The Thebius of P. Papinius Statins." Educator. Instructor
in Languages, Brooklyn Boys' High School.
157 Midwood Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Louis Delamarre. Bach. Ss Lettres, 1881, Licensie es Lettres, 1894, Uni"
versity of Paris. Thesis: " Tacite et la Litterature Francaise." Educator.
Assistant Professor of French, College of the City of New York; Lecturer
on French Language and Literature, Washington Square College and
Graduate School of New York University; Secretaire GSnSrale, Federation
de V Alliance Francaise.
237 Tecumseh Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Charles F. Horne. B.S., 1889; M.S., 1897, College of the City of New York.
Thesis: " The Historical Development of the Modern Novel out of Early
Fiction." Educator and Author. Assistant Professor of English,
College of the City of New York. Author of " The Technique of the Novel."
"Chronological History of the United States," etc.
616 W. 148th St., New York City.
Carl W. Kinkeldy. B.A., 1893, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1898, New York University. Thesis: "Critique of Ladd's Philosophy."
Educator. Instructor in German, College of the City of New York.
1041 Faile St,; New York City.
78 New York University
Lewis Gaston Leart. B.S., 1897, Rutgers College. Thesis: "The Cos-
mology of the Old Testament." Clergyman. Pastor, Huguenot Memo-
rial Church (Presbyterian), Pelham Manor, N. Y.
Pelham Manor, N. Y.
Orville Reed. B.A., 1877, Yale College; Union Theological Seminary,
1878-80. Thesis: " Beginnings of Rational Christianity in England, Cul-
minating in Matthew TindaVs Philosophy of Religion." Clergyman.
Pastor, Trinity Church (Presbyterian), Montclair, N. J.
74 Midland Ave., Montclair, N. J.
1906.
John Robert Braeuer. M. Litt. 1893, Concordia College, Concordia
Theological Seminary, 1896. Thesis: "Classic Pagan References of
Nascent Christianity." Clergyman. Pastor, St. Paul's English Lutheran
Church, Seattle, Wash.
4119 Phinney Ave., Seattle, Wash.
Victor Emanuel Francois. University of Brussels, 1887; M.A., 1892,
University of Michigan. Thesis: "Walter Scott and Alfred de Vigny."
Educator. Associate Professor of French, College of the City of New York.
450 W. 147th St., New York City.
Thomas R. Moore. B.A., 1897; M.A., 1905, New York University. Thesis:
" Trust Companies in the State of New York." Instructor in History,
College of the City of New York.
14 E. 127th St., New York City.
Henry Neumann. B.A., 1900, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1903,
New York University. Thesis: " The Villain in English Novels." Edu-
cator. Leader, Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture.
304 Marlborough Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Marcus Neustaedter. Ober-Gymnasium. Brody, Galicia, 1888; M.D.,
1896, University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College. Thesis: " The
Rise and Development of the Concept of Experience in the History of
Philosophy." Physician. Medical Inspector, New York City Health
Dept.; Asst. Physician, Children s Department, Mt. Sinai Hosp., N. Y. C;
Medical Examiner, N. Y. Life Insurance Co.; Instructor in Nervous
Diseases, University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College, New York
University.
Ill Second St., New York City.
The Graduate School 79
Earle Fenton Palmer. B.S., 1888, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
190£, New York University. Thesis: "An Inductive Study of the Meta-
phorical Language of the Book of Job." Educator. Instructor in Eng-
lish, College of the City of New York.
828 St. Nicholas Ave., New York City.
Thomas Valentine Parker. B.A., 1900; M.A., 1903, Amherst College.
Thesis: " The Relations of the United States Government with the Cherokee
Tribe of Indians." Clergyman. Pastor, Grace Church (Baptist), Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
465 43rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Adam Franklin Ross. Ph.B., 1889; M.A., 1900, Brown University. Thesis:
" The History of Lotteries in the State of New York." Educator. In-
structor in History, Stuyvesant High School, New York City; Instructor in
Political Science, Columbia University (Extension Teaching).
49 Herkimer St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
1907
Gustav Walther Eickmann. B.A., 1897; M.A., 1898, University of Wyo-
ming. Thesis: "Die Angelogie und Daemonologie des Korans in Vergleich
zu der Engel und Geisterlehre der Heiligen Schrift." Clergyman. Pas-
tor, St. Luke's (Lutheran) Church, New York City.
1722 Adams St., Bronx, New York City.
Lee Galloway. B.S., 1896, University of Minnesota. Thesis: "Economics
of Dock Management." Educator. Assistant Professor of Commerce and
Industry, New York University. Secretary, National Association of
Corporation Schools.
New York University, Washington Square, New York City.
Charles E. Herring. B.A., 1883, College of the City of New York. Thesis:
" The Worship of Creative Energy, as Symbolized by the Serpent." Clergy-
man.
102 Central Ave., Plainfield, N. J.
Frederick William Hock. Muelhausen Gymnasium (German), 1888;
M.A., 1899, New York University. Thesis: " The Metrical Variants in
Plautus." Clergyman and Educator. Pastor, Second German Presby-
terian Church, Newark, N. J.; Assistant Professor of Modern Languages,
Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, N. J.
• 283 North Sixth St., Newark, N. J.
80 New York University
Frederick B. Robinson. B. A., 1904, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1906, New York University. Thesis: " The Development of the Concept
of Value in American Political Economy." Educator. Instructor in
Public Speaking in the College of the City of New York.
456 W. 149th St., New York City.
Thomas Travis. Ph.B., Wesleyan University; B.D., 1903, Union Theological
Seminary; M.A., 1904, Columbia University. Thesis: "Juvenile Delin-
quency." Clergyman. Pastor, Watchung Avenue Congregational Church.
179 Watchung Ave., Montclair, N. J.
Lewis Henry Tuthill. B.A., 1884; M.A., 1885, Cornell University,
Thesis: "A Study of the 'Ad C. Herrenium.' " Educator. Principal.
Public School No. 16, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1239 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
IQ08
Henry N. Davidson. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1906, New York University. Thesis: " Euckens Philosophy as a Founda-
tion of Characteristic Religion." Educator. Teacher in Public School
No. 82, New York City.
828 E. 165th St., New York City.
Charles Cudworth Delano, Jr. B.A., 1898; M.A., 1899, Boston Univer-
sity. Thesis: " The Private Economy of the Athenians of the Fourth and
Fifth Centuries." Educator. Instructor in Latin, Brooklyn Latin
School.
40 Monroe Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Benjamin Garrison Demarest. LL.B., 1888, Columbia University; LL.M.,
1892; B.S., 1905; M.A., 1907; New York University. Thesis: "The
Psychology of Legal Evidence." Lawyer.
1 Lloyd Place, Montclair, N. J.
Edoardo San Giovanni. B. Litt., 1897, Royal Lyceum, Corregio, Italy;
M.A., 1906, New York University. Thesis: "De Versu Heroico Statiano
ad Vergilianum Relato." Educator. Instructor in Latin, Manual Train-
ing High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Manual Training High School, Seventh Ave. and Fourth St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Carl Albert Krause. B.A., 1895; M.A., 1897, Eureka College (Illinois);
University of Marburg, University of Lausanne. Thesis: "Gerhart
Hauptmann's Treatment of Blank Verse." Educator. Head of Modern
Language Dept., Jamaica High School, Jamaica, N. Y.; Lecturer on
Methods in Modern Foreign Languages, New York University.
1087a Prospect Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School 81
Lindsay B. Longacre. E.M., 1892, Columbia University; B.D., 1896,
Drew Theological Seminary. Thesis: "Elijah and Elisha and Their
Part in the Political and Religious Crisis in Israel in the Ninth Century,
B.C." Clergyman. Professor of Old Testament Literature and Religion
in the Iliff School of Theology, University Park, Colorado.
University Park, Colorado.
Cornelia E. MacMullan. B.S., 190k; Pd.M., 1902; Pd.D., 1903; M.A.,
1906. Thesis: " The Elegy in English Literature." Educator. Head of
Department of English Literature, State Normal School, Montclair, N. J.
State Normal School, Montclair, N. J.
Albert Amedee Meras. B.A., 1900, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
190^, New York University. Thesis: "Genesis of the Monroe Doctrine."
Educator. Instructor in Newtown High School, Elmhurst, L.I.; Lecturer
in French, Washington Square College, New York University.
9 Elmhurat Ave., Elmhurst, L. I.
Thomas John Mulvey. St. Mary's College, 1893; College of Propaganda,
Rome, 1896; M.A., 190k, New York University. Thesis: "The Seven
Books of Arnobius adversus Nationes." Clergyman. Chaplain, King's
County Penitentiary.
108 St. Edwards St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Bradley Otis. B.A., 1901, Iowa College; M.A., 190k, Columbia
University. Thesis: "American Verse in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth
Centuries." Educator. Instructor in English, College of the City of
New York.
504 W. 112th St., New York City.
George Clare Sprague. B.A., 1905, Olivet College. Thesis: " The Land
System of Colonial New York." Educator and Lawyer. Registrar and
Instructor in Law, New York University.
323 E. 25th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
John Andy Thackston. B.A., 1899, Furman University; Pd.M., 1907, New
York University. Thesis: "Primary and Secondary Education in South
Carolina." Educator. Professor, University of Florida.
Gainesville, Fla.
William T. Whitney. B.S., 190k; Pd.D., 1905, New York University.
Thesis: "Lotzes Conception of Reality." Educator. Superintendent
of Schools.
Madison, N. J.
82 New York University
Augusta Manie Wilson. B.A., 1897, Hunter College of the City of New
York; M. A., 1904, New York University. Thesis: " The Principle of the
Ego in Philosophy with Special Reference to its Influence on Schlegel's
Doctrine of 'Ironic' " Educator. Assistant to Principal, Public School
No. 52, Bronx, New York City.
1961 Maples Ave., New York City.
1909
Anees Tannus Baroody. B.A., Syrian Protestant College. Thesis: "The
Woman of the Koran."
Care of English Post Office, Beirut, Syria.
Charles Grenville Cole. B.A., 1898; M.A., 1900, Princeton University.
Thesis: " The Poetical Elements in the Diction and Syntax of Tacitus.'*
Educator. Instructor in Greek, Latin and History, in Cartaret Academy,
Orange, N. J.
83 Cleveland St., Orange, N. J.
James Albert Hamilton. B.A., 1898, University of Rochester; M.A., 1903;
LL.B., 190k, New York University. Thesis: "Negro Suffrage and Con-
gressional Representation." Educator. Instructor in Public School No.
9, Bronx, New York City.
357 W. 29th St., New York City.
Charles E. Hesselgrave. B.A., 1893, Middlebury College; M.A., 1899,
New York University. Thesis: " The Hebrew Personification of Wisdom."
Clergyman. Pastor, Congregational Church, Chatham, N. Y.
South Manchester, Conn.
Samuel Katz. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1908,
New York University. Thesis: "John Home." Educator. Instructor
in Public School No. 8k, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Principal of Brooklyn Evening
Elementary School for Foreigners.
751 Howard Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Paul Klapper. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1907,
New York University. Thesis: " The Attitude of Organized Labor toward
Labor-saving Machinery." Educator. Instructor in Education, and
Secretary of Extension Courses, College of the City of New York. Lec-
turer on Methods in English. School of Pedagogy, New York Uni-
versity.
1157 Longfellow Ave., Bronx, New York City.
The Graduate School 83
David Klein. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York; M.A., 190 %,
Columbia University. Thesis: "Literary Criticism among the Elizabethan
Dramatists." Educator. Instructor in English, College of the City of
New York.
1065 Boston Road, Bronx, New York City.
Michael Henry Lucey. B.S., 1906; M.A., 1908, Columbia University.
Thesis: " The Catholic Parish Schools in New York City." Educator.
Instructor in History and Economics, DeWitt Clinton High School, New
York City.
Emerson Hill, Staten Island.
Alexander Lyons. B.L., 1891, Cincinnati University; M.A., 1905, Colum-
bia University. Thesis: " Shaftsbury s Ethical Principle." Clergyman.
Rabbi, Congregational Beth Elohim, Brooklyn, N. Y.
526 8th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Arthur Selwyn-Brown. B.S., 1906; M.A., 1908; J.D., 1911, New York
University. Thesis: " The Psychology of Evaluation." Broker.
332 W. 55th St., New York City.
Giles John Swan. B.A., 1897, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1905,
New York University. Thesis: " The Political Philosophy of John C.
Calhoun." Educator. Instructor in Public School No. 1^7, New York
City.
632 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y.
I9IO
Jane Gray Carter. B.A., 1901, Hunter College of the City of New York;
M.A., 190 h New York University. Thesis: " Quintillian' s Didactic
Metaphors." Educator. Tutor in Latin, Normal College of the City of
New York.
426 Central Park West, New York City.
Charles G. Ellis. B.A., 1890, M.A., 1893, Lafayette College. Thesis:
"Jonathan Edwards' Ethics." Clergyman. Pastor, Roundout Presby-
terian Church, Kingston, N. Y.
18 Wurts St., Kingston, N. Y.
Arthur C. Fleshman. B.S., 188^; M.S., 1892, Lebanon University; M.A.,
1903, Columbian University {Washington, D. C). Thesis: "The Meta-
physics of Education." Educator. Head of Department of Education,
State Normal School, West Chester, Pa.
612 South Walnut St., West Chester, Pa.
84 New York University
Clayton Charles Kohl. Ph.B., 1901, Ohio State University; Pd.M., 1907,
New York University. Thesis: " Claims as a Cause of the War with Mex-
ico." Educator. Professor, Mount Holyoke College.
Mt. Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass.
Abraham J. Korey. B.S., 1906, New York University. Thesis: "Private
Benefactions to Public Schools in the United States." Educator. In-
structor, Stuyvesant High School, New York City.
334 E. 25th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Robert MacDonald. B.A., 1891>; M.A., 1895; B.D., 1896, Harvard Uni-
versity. Thesis: "A Critique of the Modern Social Theories of Conscience
in the Light of an Intellectualistic Ideal." Clergyman. Pastor, Wash-
ington Avenue Baptist Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.
100 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Patrick J. O'Donnell. B.D., B.C.L., 1901; Maynooth College {Ireland);
M.A., 1908, Columbia University. Thesis: " The Role of Attention and
Habit in the Determination of Social Mind and Corporate Life." Clergy-
man. Assistant Rector, St. Francis de Sales' Church, New York City.
135 E. 96th St., New York City.
Adda Pearl Sackett. Pd.M., 1903; Pd.D., 190h; B.S., 1906, New York
University. Thesis: " The Discrimination of School Children in the Field
of Visual Perception." Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 1£7,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
224 Lexington Ave., New York City (or Sidney, N. Y.).
William Joseph Thompson. B.S., 188^, University of Pennsylvania; B.D.,
1892, Drew Theological Seminary; M.A., 1901, Harvard University.
Thesis: "A Sociological Study of a Denominational Group of Church
Officers." Clergyman and Educator. Professor of Religious Psychology
and Pedagogy, Drew Theological Seminary, Madison, N. J.
Drew Theological Seminary, Madison, N. J.
Mark Waldman. M.A., 1902, Columbia University. Thesis: "Ideal
View of Pre-Exilic Education as Introductory to the Talmudic, the Medi-
aeval, and the Modern Era." Educator. Instructor, Bryant High
School, Long Island City, L. I.
1481 Bryant Ave., Bronx, New York City.
1911
Adaline May Conway. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New
York; M.A., 1908, New York University. Thesis: " The Essay in Amer-
ican Literature." Author.
2221 Fontaine St., Philadelphia, Pa.
The Graduate School 85
George Millard Davison. B.A., 1892, Cornell University. Thesis: "The
Possibility of an Improved Course of Study for the Intelligent Children
of Cultured Parents." Educator. Principal, Public School No. 155,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
1429 Union St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
C. Edward Jones. Pd.B., 1904; Pd.M., 1905, Albany Normal College; B.S.,
1907; M.A., 1908, New York University. Thesis: " Type Forms of Litera-
ture in Relation to High School Education." Educator. Superintendent
of Schools; Principal, Teachers'' Training School, Albany, N. Y.
89 Woodlawn Ave., Albany, N. Y.
Wallace Franklin Jones. B.A., 1907, University of Illinois; M.A., 1908,
Columbia University. Thesis: "An Experimental-Critical Study of
Present Systems of Grading and Promotion." Educator. Head of De-
partment of Education, University of South Dakota.
Vermilion, S. Dak.
Joseph J. Klein. B.S., 1906, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1910,
New York University. Thesis: " The Development of Mercantile Instru-
ments of Credit in the United States." Educator. Instructor, Richmond
Hill High School, Richmond Hill, L. I.
56 W. 115th St., New York City.
William Whitfield Lamb. B.A., 1901; M.A., 1904, Amherst College,
Thesis: " The Syntax of Heptameron, by Marguerite de Navarre." Edu-
cator. Instructor, Manual Training High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
952 E. 13th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
George Lamouret. B.A., 1899, University of Paris. Thesis: " The French
State and its Comedians in the Eighteenth Century." Educator. In-
structor in French, College of the City of New York.
139th St. and St. Nicholas Terrace, New York City.
Floyd Swallow Leach. B.A., 1903, Wesleyan University; M.A., 1905,
Yale University; B.D., 1908, General Theological Seminary. Thesis:
"Individual Characteristics Contributory to Vagrancy." Clergyman.
Assistant Pastor, St. Luke's Hospital Chapel, and Executive Secretary of
the Social Service Commission of the Protestant Episcopal Diocese of New
York.
416 Lafayette St., New York City.
Elias Lieberman. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1906,
New York University. Thesis: "The Local Short Story." Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 62, New York City.
625 Jefferson Place, New York City.
New York University
Gabriel R. Mason. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1907, New York University. Thesis: " The Relation of the God of Spinoza
to the Absolute of Schelling." Educator. Instructor, Public School No.
62, New York City.
1341 Clinton Ave., New York City.
John Henry Meneely. B.A., 1893; M.A., 1896, University of Illinois.
Thesis: "A Study of American Drama Prior to 1801." Educator. In-
structor, Manual Training High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
220 Sixth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Francis L. Rougier. B.A., 1906, Fordham University; M.A., 1907, New
York University. Thesis: " The Influence of Plautus on French Comedy."
Educator. Instructor in French, College of the City of New York; Lec-
turer in French, School of Commerce, Accounts and Finance, New York
University.
4006 Pratt Ave., Edenwald, New York City.
Ignatz Saymon. B.A., 1900, College of the City of New York; LL.B., 190k;
M.A., 1908, New York University. Thesis: "Primitive Education.''*
Educator. Instructor, Public School Nol 77, New York City.
157 W. 111th St., New York City.
Isidore Springer. B.S., 1901, College of the City of New York; Pd.M.,
1907, New York University. Thesis: "Mental Reproductive Types in
Arithmetic." Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 8h omd Evening
Elementary School No. Ikh, Brooklyn, N. Y.
34 Dennington Ave., Woodhaven, L. I.
Charles Augustus Tonsor, Jr. B.A., 1907; M.A., 1908, New York Uni-
versity. Thesis: "Demosthenes: Guilty of Bribe-taking or of a Blunder
in Statesmanship." Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 17, Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
218 Clermont Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Parker Wharton. B.A., 1902; M.A., 1906, Columbia Univer-
sity. Thesis: "Individual Types in School Children." Educator.
Instructor, High School of Commerce, New York City.
2081 Vyse Ave., New York City.
1012
Alexander Boecker. B.S., 1898, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1906, New York University. Thesis: "An Italian Source of Shakes-
peare's 'Julius Casar.' " Educator. Instructor, Manual Training High
School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
554-7th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School 87
Guernsey J. Borst. B.A., 1903, Cornell University; Pd.M., 1909; Pd.D.,
1911, New York University. Thesis: "Experimental Study of the Learn-
ing Process in Latin." Educator. Supervising Principal, Edgewood
(R. I.) Public Schools, 1912-13; Superintendent of Schools, Danbury,
Conn., 1913-.
Danbury, Conn.
Americo Ulysses Nicholas Camera. Ph.B., 1900, New York University;
M.A., 1901, Columbia University. Thesis: "Italian Influences upon
French Comedy before Moliere." Educator. Instructor in French, College
of the City of New York.
575 West Ave., Flatbush, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Louis S. Friedland. B.A., 1905, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1910, New York University. Thesis: "Spenser's Early Poems: Studied
in Connection with the Literature of the French Renaissance.'' 'K Educator.
Tutor in English, College of the City of New York.
901 Prospect Ave., New York City.
Enoch C. Lavers. B.A., 1890, University of Chicago; Ph.D., 1893, Illinois
Wesleyan University; Pd.D., 1894, New York University. Thesis:
"The Moral Philosophy of Richard Price." Educator.
297 Virginia Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
Pierre J Marique. B.S., 1909; Ph.D., 1911, New York University. The-
sis: "Vocational Education in Belgium." Educator. Instructor in
French, College of the City of New York.
345 E. 193rd St., New York City.
Floyd J. Melvin. B.S., 1907; M.A., 1909, New York University. Thesis:
"Constructive Socialism." Educator. Instructor, Commercial High
School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
348 New York Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Nathan Peyser. B.S., 1906; M.A., 1910, New York University. Thesis:
"Dr. W. A. Lay — Pioneer in the Field of Experimental Pedagogy."
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. k, Bronx, New York City.
641 E. 175th St., New York City.
1913
Martha Adler. B.A., 1894, Hunter College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1906, New York University. Thesis: "The Problem of 'General Intelli-
gence' of School Children in the Light of Experimental Investigations."
Educator. Head of ^Department, Boys' Department, Public School No.
77, Manhattan.
1443 Lexington Ave., New York City.
88 New York University
Frank Forest Bunker. Ph.B., 1901, University of California. Thesis:
"The Functional Reorganization of the American Public School System."
Business Manager. Manager of the Keystone Oil Company, Shreveport,
Louisiana.
982 Louisiana Ave., Shreveport, La.
John Wesley Carr. B.A., 1885; M.A., 1890, Indiana University. Thesis:
"A System of School Support — New Jersey." Educator. Superintendent
of Schools, Bayonne, N. J.
20 W. 42nd. St., Bayonne, N. J.
Bruno Fedter. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1905,
Columbia University. Thesis: "Seneca as a Representative of Stoicism
under the Early Roman Emperors." Educator. Tutor in German,
College of the City of New York.
223 E. 200th St., New York City.
Alfred O. Fonkalsrud. B.A., 1907; M.A., 1908, Augustana College,
Thesis: "Scandinavians as a Social Force in America." Clergyman.
Rector and Superintendent of the Norwegian Lutheran Deaconess Home
and Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y.
4520 4th Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Armand Hannig. B.S., 1905, College of the City of New York.
Thesis: "An Experimental Investigation in the Teaching and Study
of History." Educator. Teacher of Graduating ^ Class, Public , School
No. 37, Manhattan.
1245 Madison Ave., New York City.
Nellie Priscilla Hewins. B.S., 1898, Cornell University; M.A., 1900,
Columbia University. Thesis: "The Doctrine of Formal Discipline
in the Light of Experimental Investigations." Educator. Assistant
Teacher of Biology, Newtown High School, Borough of Queens, New York
City.
Clermont Terrace, Elmhurst, L. I.
Henry Budd Howell. B.A., 1886, Lafayette College; M.A., 1897, Colum-
bia University. Thesis: "Experimental Critical Study in School Arith-
metic." Educator. Principal, Public School Nol 27, Jersey City, N. J.
158 Magnolia Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
William Joseph McGrath. B.A., 1905, College of the City of New York;
M..A, 1909, Columbia University. Thesis: "The History of Vocational
Education." Educator. Instructor in English, High School of Com-
merce, New York City.
561 W. 180th St., New York City.
The Graduate School 89
Samuel White Patterson. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York;
M.A., 1906, New York University; M.A., 1910, Columbia University.
Thesis: "American Patriotic Verse {1775-1825)" Instructor in English,
DeWitt Clinton High School, New York City; Lecture in History,
Board of Education, New York City.
343 W. 23rd St., New York City.
Joseph Pearl. B.A., 1906, College of the City of New York. Thesis: "The
Epic Nomenclature of Virgil." Educator. Tutor in Latin, College of
the City of New York.
1375 Franklin Ave., Bronx, New York City.
Charles Lester Sherman. Ph.B., 1907, Upper Iowa University; Pd.M.,
1911, New York University. Thesis: "The Relation between Herbert
Spencer s Social and Educational Philosophy." Educator.
133 W. 4th St., New York City.
Charles W. Siedler. B.A., 1908, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1910, New York University. Thesis: "Suetonius and his Sources."
Educator. Instructor in Latin, Evander Childs High School (Fordham
Annex), Bronx, New York City.
2316 Andrews Ave., University Heights, New York City.
IQI4
Maxime Lucien Bergeron. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York;
M.A., 190k, Yale University. Thesis: "The Syntax of Pierre Charron's
'Traite de la Sagesse' compared with that of Rabelais and Montaigne."
Educator. Tutor in French, College of the City of New York.
511 W. 146th St., New York City.
Clarence Gray Bradford. B.A., 1911, University of Arkansas. Edu-
cator. Supervisor of Training School, East Central State Normal College,
Ada, Oklahoma.
Ada, Okla.
George Irving Brinkerhoff. B.A., 1906; M.A., 1908, New York Uni-
versity. Thesis: "The Relation of Practical School Work and of the Psy-
chology of Reading to the Pedagogy of Reading." Educator. Principal,
Webster School, Newark, N. J.
434 Third Ave., Newark, N. J.
Joseph Cohen. B.A., 1908, College of the City of New York; M.A., 1912;
Pd.M., 1913, New York University. Thesis: "A Critical and Experi-
mental Study of Children's Drawings." Educator. Instructor, Public
School No. h3, Brooklyn, N. Y.
266 Hewes St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
90 New York University
Cordie Jacob Culp. B.A., 1895, Richmond College (Ohio); M.A., 1902,
Princeton University. Thesis: "The Ethical Ideal of Renunciation."
Clergyman. Pastor, Bound Brook Presbyterian Church.
128 East Union Ave., Bound Brook, N. J.
Thomas Hugh Gallagher. Ph.B., 1908, Upper Iowa University; S.T.B.,
1912, Boston University. Thesis: "The History of the Sunday School
Curriculum." Clergyman. Pastor, First Methodist Episcopal Church,
Eldora, Iowa.
Eldora, la.
Harold Korn. B.A., 1901; M.A., 1908, Columbia University. Thesis:
"The Oratory of the American Revolution." Broker. In business, New
York City.
33 W. 42nd St., New York City.
Frederick Houk Law. B.A., 1895, Amherst College; M.A., 1896, Columbia
University. Thesis: "The Elizabethan Tragedy of Blood." Educator.
Instructor in English, Stuyvesant High School, New York City.
472 Argyle Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Abraham Lefkowitz. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York; M.A.,
1911, New York University. Thesis: "The History of the Legislative
and Executive Attempts at Emanciaption from March 4, 1861 to January
1, 1863." Educator. Instructor, Public School No. Ilf7, Brooklyn, N. Y.
782 Bushwick Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
John Daly McCarthy. B.S., 1908, Dartmouth College; M.A., 1911, Colum-
bia University. Thesis: "The Influence of Certain Drugs on the Efficiency
of Mental Work." Educator. Instructor, Morris High School. New
York City.
2337 Andrews Ave., New York City.
Jacob Edward Mayman. B.S., 1908, Teachers College (Columbia Uni-
versity). Thesis: "An Experimental Investigation of the Book Method,
Lecture Method, and Experimental Method of Teaching Elemen-
tary Science in Elementary Schools." Educator. Instructor, Public
School No. 8h, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1187 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Jacob Mayer Rosenberg. B.A., 190 h College of the City of New York.
Thesis: "An Historical Study of the Elimination of the Religious, Civil
and Political Disabilities of the Jews in the Thirteen Original States, from
their Earliest Days to the Present." Educator. Instructor, Morris High
School, New York City.
1115 Boston Road, New York City.
The Graduate School 91
Collye Fred ward Sparkman. Pd.B., 1908, Valparaiso University; M.A.,
1912, Clark University. Thesis: "A History of Theories of Moral Edu-
cation." Educator. Instructor in Spanish, DeWitt Clinton High School,
New York City.
139 W. 64th St., New York City.
Henry Frederick Andrew Stein. B.S., 1911; M.A., 1912, New York
University. Thesis: "Quintillian's System of Rhetoric and Tribute to
Cicero." Educator. Professor of Latin, Concordia, Bronxville, N. Y.
.''Concordia," Bronxville, N. Y.
August Steitz. B.A., 1905, New York University; M.A., 1906, Yale Uni-
versity. Thesis: "Lautlehre der Coellner Mundart. Ein Beitrag zur
Pfalzischen Mundartenforschung." Educator. Assistant Professor of
German, Oklahoma University, Norman, Oklahoma.
Norman, Okla.
Charles Frederic Stube. B.A., 1910; M.A., 1913, Hamilton College;
B.D., 191k, New Brunswick (N. J.) Reformed Theological Seminary.
Thesis: "Max Stirner — A Sociologial Study of the Potentialities of the
Individual." Clergyman. Pastor, Hyde Park Reformed Church, East
Orange, N. J.
18 Wilcox Place, East Orange, N. J.
David Beveredge Tomkins. B.D., 1901, Drew Theological Seminary; B.S.,
1911, New York University. Thesis: "The Individual and Society; a
Comparison between the Views of the Enlightenment and those of the Nine-
teenth Century." Clergyman. Pastor, Second Presbyterian Church,
Princeton, N. J.
316 First Ave., Elizabeth, N. J.
Dubois Tooker. B.A., 189b; M.A., 1906, Harvard University; Pd.M.,
1912, New York University. Thesis: "The Radio Studiorum of the
Jesuits in its Relation to their Constitution." Educator. Master in the
Tome School, Fort Deposit, Maryland.
Marlboro, N. Y. (or Fort Deposit, Md.).
George Everett Walk. B.A., 1899, Ohio Wesleyan University; M.A.,
1911, Columbia University. Thesis: "Professional Training in State
Normal Schools." Educator. Lecturer on Education and Psychology,
Extramural Division, New York University; Instructor in Education, City
Training School, Paterson, N. J.
213 E. 21st St., New York City.
92 New York University
DOCTORS OF SCIENCE OF NEW YORK UNIVERSITY— 1899-1912
1899
William Charles Alpers. Hanover U.S. {Lyceum); University of Goet-
tingen, 1871-72. Thesis: " The Oils and Terpenes of Aralia Nudicaulis."
Chemist. President, Alpers' Chemical Co. and Alpers' Pharmacy, New
York City. Trustee, New York College of Pharmacy. Editor, Deutsche
Apotheker Zeitung, New York City. Dean of the College of Pharmacy,
Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio.
Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio.
19OI
John Alfred Mandel. University of Berlin. Thesis: "Glycuronic or
Glucuronic Acid." Educator and Chemist. Professor of Chemistry,
University and Bellevue College Medical College, New York University.
338 E. 26th St., New York City.
John D. Melville. B.A., 1892, University of London; Pd.M., 1895; Pd.D.,
1896; M.A., 1897, New York University. Thesis: "Ambitus in Ancient
Rome." Educator. Principal, Public School No, 81*, Long Island City,
L.I.
167 S. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
1904
Frederick G. Reynolds. B.A., 1891, College of the City of New York;
LL.B., 1896; M.S., 1898, New York University. Thesis: " The Vicosity
Coefficient of Air and the Effect of the Roentgen Ray thereon." Educator.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Secretary of the Faculty, College
of the City of New York.
144 W. 132nd St., New York City.
1905
Frederick Malling Pedersen. B.S., 1889, College of the City of New York;
M.S., 1902, New York University. Thesis: " The Influence of Molecular
Constitution upon the Internal Friction of Gases." Educator. Assistant
Professor of Mathematics, College of the City of New York.
452 W. 144th St., New York City.
The Graduate School
1906
Maximilian Philip. B.S., 1898, College of the City of New York; M.S., 1903,
New York University. Thesis: "Form and Movements of Liquid Jets."
Educator. Instructor in Mathematics, College of the City of New
York.
100 W. 141st St., New York City.
1908
Martin A. Rosanoff. Ph.B., 1895, New York University. Thesis:
"Determination of Chlorides and Bromides in the Presence of Cyanides."
Educator. Head of Department of Chemistry and Director of Chemical
Laboratories, Clark University; Professor of Organic Chemistry, Clark
College.
7 Downing St., Worcester, Mass.
1909
Frederick E. Breithut. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York.
Thesis: " The Partial Vapor Pressures in Binary Mixtures." Educator.
Instructor in Chemistry, College of the City of New York.
569 W. 171st St., New York City.
David Heidom Ray. B.A., 1897, College of the City of New York; B.S.,
1901; M. A., 1901, Columbia University; C.E., 1902, New York University.
Thesis: " The Science of Mechanics." Engineer. Consulting Engineer.
27 W. 33rd St., New York City.
1910
John Paul Simmons. B.S., 190k, New York University. Thesis: "Isom-
erisms in the Cobalt Ammines." Educator. Assistant Professor of
Chemistry, New York University.
University Heights, New York City.
1911
Erich Hausmann. B.S., 1907, Cooper Institute; E.E., 1908, Brooklyn Poly-
technic Institute; M.S., 1910, New York University. Thesis: "Electric
Wave Propagation and Distortion Along Conductors." Educator. As-
sistant Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering, Brooklyn Poly-
technical Institute; Lecturer on Electricity, Graduate School, New York
University.
726 Sackett St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
94 New York University
1912
Ephraim M. Ewing. B.A., 1909; M.A., 1910, University of Missouri.
Thesis: "The Venous Pulse." Educator. Instructor in Physiology,
University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College, and Graduate School,
New York University.
338 E. 26th St., New York City.
Albert P. Pacini. B.S., 1905, College of the City of New York; M.S., 1911,
New York University. Thesis: " Metamorphism in Portland Cement."
Chemist. Chemist, Board of Water Supply, City of New York. Fellow,
New York Academy of Sciences.
275 W. 140th St., New York City.
1913
Raymond Bartlett Earle. B.A., 1900; B.S., 1901, Harvard University;
M.S., 1912, New York University. Thesis: "The Genesis of Palezoic
Interbedded Iron Ores." Educator. Assistant Professor of Geology,
Normal College of the City of New York (Department of Natural Science).
65 Mayflower Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
John Wesley Marden. B.S., 1909, Illinois, Illinois Wesleyan University;
M.S., 1911, New York University. Thesis: " The Quantitative Deter-
mination of Perchlorates and a New Method for the Determination of the
Specific Heat of Dilute Solutions." Chemist. Chief Chemist, South
Dakota State Food and Drug Department, Vermilion, S. D.
State Food and Drug Dept., University of South Dakota, Vermilion, S. D.
Richard Edwin Lee. B.S., 1896, Northeastern Ohio College; M.S., 1902,
Mt. Union College; M.A., 1906, Harvard University. Thesis: "A
New Decision Method for Determining the Density of Liquids." Educator.
Director of the Department of Chemistry, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa.
Alden Hall of Chemistry, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa.
The Graduate School
95
STATISTICAL SUMMARY
Doctors of Philosophy Doctors of Science
Men 235 (13 deceased) Men 16
Women 13 Women 0
Total
229
Total
16
Teachers (9 women) 127
Clergymen 94
Lawyers 5
Physicians 3
Broker
Journalist
Acturay
Statistician
Manufacturer
Editor (woman)
Authors (woman) 2
Unknown (1 woman) 10
Business Manager 1
Teachers
Chemists
Engineer
12
3
1
16
248
96 New York University
MASTERS OF ARTS OF NEW YORK UNIVERSITY— 1887-1903
1887
George Callen Whtte (See Ph.D., 1891).
1888
John Shields Kennedy (See Ph.D., 1889).
1891
Edward Acheson. Wycliffe College, Toronto, Ont.
Lewis Wyckliffe Barney (See Ph.D., 1892).
Avac Cutujian. B.A., 1888, New York University; M.D., 1893, Long
Island College Hospital. Physician. Long Island College Hospital,
1890-93. Visiting physician to De Milt Dispensary.
71 Lexington Ave., New York City.
John Handley (See Ph.D., 1892).
Thomas Calvin McClelland (See Ph.D., 1892).
Kumakichiro Oishi. B.A., 1889, Rutgers College.
Waseda, Japan.
Lindsay Parker (See Ph.D., 1893).
Ernest Voorhis (See Ph.D., 1893).
1892
Henry Matthias Brown. B.S., C.E., 1886; B.A., 1890; D.D., 1907, New
York University. Graduate, 1893, Union Theological Seminary. Clergy-
man. Practiced profession of engineering from 1886-1893. Ordained in
189^. Pastor of Christ Congregational Church, New York City, 1894-.
1808 Concourse and Grand Blvd., Bron*. New York City.
John Lewis Clark. B.A., 1891, Lincoln University. Graduate, 1894,
Union Theological Seminary. D.D. — Clergyman. Pastor, Bushwick
Ave. Congregational Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., 1906-.
47 Linden St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School 97
Arthur Cushing Dill. B.A., 1880, Yale University. Attended Union
Theological Seminary, 1880-83, 1891-92. D.D., 1903, Fargo College.
Clergyman and Educator. Pastor of churches {Congregational) in Niagara
Falls, N. Y., and Weiser, Idaho; Chaplain and Lecturer on Astronomy and
Geology, Idaho Industrial Institute, 190^-05. Pastor, Honeoye, N. Y.
Pastor, First Cong. Church; Instructor in Philosophy and Psychology,
Rollins College, Winter Park, Fla.
Winter Park, Fla.
George Albert Disbrow. B.A., 1890; Pd.M., 1896. Educator. Teacher
of Classics and English in schools in New York, Pennsylvania and New
Jersey, 1890-98. Private tutoring, 1898-.
20 Primrose Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Martin Luther Gates (See Ph.D., 1895).
Frederic Everest Gunnison. B.A., 1890, Columbia University; LL.B.,
1892, New York University. Lawyer. Practicing law, New York City.
Director, Brooklyn, Queens County & Suburban R. R. Co., and of Cosmo-
politan Land Company; President and Director, Home Trust Company of
New York; Trustee, East Brooklyn Savings Bank.
150 Nassau St., New York City.
Frank Bergen Kelley (See Ph.D., 18H).
James Wilmer Kennedy. B.A., 1876, Lincoln University. Educator.
Assistant Superintendent of City Schools, Newark, N. J.
3 Emmett St., Newark, N. J.
Sarah Jane McNary (See Ph.D., 1903).
Henry Keller Miller. B.A., 1888, Franklin and Marshall College. Grad-
uate, Union Theological Seminary, 1892. Clergyman and Educator.
Professor, Ethical Apologetics and English, Tohoku Gakuin (No-W.
College), Sendai, Japan, 1892-96. Foreign Missionary, Sendai, Japan,
1896-.
Tokio, Japan.
William Osgood Mussey. B.A., 1889, University of Cincinnati. Ad-
mitted to the Bar, Ohio, 1893. Educator. Instructor, English, Uni-
versity of Cincinnati, 1893-95. Teacher, Denver, Col., 1895-.
Denver, Col.
Alfred Opdyke. B.A., 1890; LL.B., 1895. Lawyer. Instructor in Law.
1896-1900; Professor of Law, 1900-02, New York University Law School,
Practicing law, New York City.
20 Nassau St., New York City.
98 New York University
Thornton Bancroft Penfield. B.A., 1890, Columbia University; graduate,
Union Theological Seminary, 1893. Clergyman. Department Secretary
for Young People's Work, Presbyterian Board of Home Missions, 1893-96.
Pastor, Cumberland Street Chapel, New York City, 1896-97; Secretary,
Brooklyn Central Y. M. C. A., 1897-.
36 Maple St., Englewood, N. J.
Herbert Dalton Pettit. B.A., 1879, Columbia University. Educator.
Sidney Wallace Probert. B.A., 1888, New York University. Educator.
Principal, Public School, Paterson, N. J.
49 Jasper St., Paterson, N. J.
Thomas Calhoun Stearns. B.A., 1886; Ph.D., 1898, Yale University.
Educator. Lecturer, History of Philosophy, 189J/.-96; instructor, Ancient
Philosophy, 1898-02; lecturer, Ancient Philosophy, 1902-, Yale Univer-
sity.
Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
I8Q3
Henry Martin Baird, Jr. B.A., 1891; LL.B., 1894, New York University.
Lawyer. Practicing law in Yonkers, N. Y.
308 Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
Clifton William Bates. B.A., 1885, Dartmouth College. Educator.
Instructor, Boys' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
363 Grand Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Frederick Wood Everleth (See Ph.D., 1899).
WiNTHROP Gates.* B.A., 1889. Attended Union Theological Seminary
1889-92. Clergyman. Pastor, Presbyterian Church, Eddington, Pa.t
1893-95. Reporter, New York City and Newark, 1895-97.
d. Aug. 17, 1897, New York City.
Farquhar David McRae (See Ph.D., 1896).
William Thomas Morrey. B.A., 1888, Ohio State University. Educator.
Instructor, Bushwick High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
535 W. 111th St., New York City.
Arthur Murphy. Wyclife College, Toronto, Ont.
Achille Naesseus. B.A., Royal Lycee, Lille, France.
Grace Thome Pompilly. B.A., 1886, Vassar College. Educator. Instruc-
tor in Music, Orton School, Pasadena, Cal.
911 Oakland Ave., Pasadena, Cal.
The Graduate School 99
Chakles Herbert Tyndall (See Ph.D., 1895).
Squire Turner Willis. B.A., 1891, Milligan College; LL.D., 1907, Transyl-
vania University. Clergyman. Teacher and 'pastor, Milligan College;
pastor of churches in New York City and Lynchburg, Va., 1888-1912.
Pastor, First Christian Church, St. Paul, Minn., 1913-.
235 Nelson Ave., St. Paul, Minn.
1894
Alfred Hodgdon Brown. B.A., 1892, New York University. Attended
General Theological Seminary, 1892-93. Dramatic Critic. President,
Department of Dramatic Art, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences.
Hotel Walton, 104 W. 70th St., New York City.
Albert Cain. B.A., 1873, National Normal School; B.D., 1877, Drew
Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Churches Newark Conference
(M. E.).
Andover, N. J.
Paul Campbell Cloyd. B.A., 1892; LL.B., 1893, New York University.
Lawyer.
14 Oak Ridge Ave., Summit, N. J.
Jesse Grant Cramer. College of Arts and Pure Science, New York Uni-
versity, 1886-89. Author. Instructor in Modern Languages, Flushing
(L. I.) Institute, 1891-92; Lehigh University, 1893-98. Translated
Danish Folk Tales; edited Letters of his uncle, Ulysses S. Grant, "To his
Father and Youngest Sister, 1859-78" ; wrote "Qa et La en France, Paris
et a Travers la France en Automobile."
70 Lenox Ave., East Orange, N. J.
George Peck Eckman (See Ph.D., 1897).
Hattie Goff. B.A., 1876, Kentucky
Edith Mary Luther. B.A., 1891, Wellesley College. Educator. Instruc-
tor, Manual Training High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
489 6th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Curtiss Mains.* B.A., 1892; LL.B., 1899, New York University;
Ph.D., 1896, University of Halle, Germany. Lawyer. Professor of
English Literature, Denver University, 1893. After receiving Ph.D.,
practiced law in New York City; member of New York Assembly.
♦Deceased.
Charles Wesley McCormick (See Ph.D., 1898).
100 New York University
Isabelle Alexander Robey (Mrs. William H., Jr.). B.A., 1892, Hunter
College of the City of New York. Graduate, Woman's Law Class, New
York University, 1895.
442 Warren St., Boston, Mass.
1895
Eli Nelson Allen. B.A., 1892, Missouri Valley College. Studied for the
ministry at Cumberland Theological Seminary, Lebanon, Tenn., and
at Union Theological Seminary, New York City. Clergyman. Pastor,
Hawthorne Park Presbyterian Church, Portland, Oregon.
Portland, Oregon.
Frederick Brewerton Carter. B.A. Graduate, 1873, General Theological
Seminary. Clergyman.
96 Elm St., Montclair, N. J.
Cornelius Thurston Chase. B.A., 1893, New York University. Clergy-
man. Formerly in charge of churches {Congregational) in Trevor, Wis.,
and Brooklyn, N. Y.
Meadville, Pa.
Harriet M. Jenckes.* B.A., 188J^, Vassar College.
♦Deceased.
Henry Lewis (See Ph.D., 1896).
Joseph T. Mahon. B.A., 1893, St. Mary's Seminary.
George Palmer Pardington (See Ph.D., 1898).
John Adolph Schwoy. Lutheran Parochial School. Concordia College.
Educator. Professor of English Language and Literature, Concordia
Institute, Bronxville, N. Y.
Bronxville, N. Y.
Duncan Wallace. B.A., 1892, Cumberland University; graduate, 1895,
Union Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Calvary (Presbyter-
ian) Church, Fresno, California.
Fresno, Cal.
William Henry Winslow. B.A., 1880, Brown University. Educator.
Superintendent of Schools of the Town of Cumberland, R. I.
Valley Falls, R. I.
1896
Elsie Welling Atwater. B.A., 1889, Smith College.
232 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School 101
Mitchell Bronk. B.A., 1886, D.D., 1913, University of Rochester.
Attended Union Theological Seminary and Crozier Theological School.
Clergyman. Pastor, Second Baptist Church, Troy, N. Y.
12 Elm St., Troy, N. Y.
Homer C. Bristol.* B.A., 181k, University of Rochester. Educator.
Principal of Public School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
d. January 22nd, 1914, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Margaret G. Bradford (Mrs. W. H. Hildreth). B.A., 1887, Boston
University.
1418 Q St. N. W., Washington, D. C.
Elmer Ernest Count. B.A., 1885, Williams College; B.D., 1889, Drew
Theological Seminary. Clergyman and Educator. Instructor, Chiesa
M. E. School of Theology, Rome.
Theodore Arthur Gessler. B.A., 189k, New York University; B.D.,
1897, University of Chicago. Merchant. With the American Sheet and
Tin Plate Company, New York City.
30 Church St., New York City.
Josephine Howard (Mrs. Hubert Arrowsmith) . B.A., 1890, Boston Uni-
versity.
170 Clinton St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Anselm Vlnet Hiester. B.S., 1887, Lebanon Valley College; B.A., 1889,
Franklin and Marshall College; Sc.D., 1913, Ursinus College. Educator.
Professor of Political and Social Science, Franklin and Marshall College.
320 Race Ave., Lancaster, Pa.
Edward Mansfield McGuffey. B.A., 1876, Kenyon College. Clergyman.
Elmhurst, L. I.
Emma Gregg Mateer (Mrs. James A. McCague). B.A., 1890, Hunter
College of the City of New York. Educator. Formerly Instructor, Hunter
College of the City of New York.
503 W. 150th St., New York City.
Robert Livingston Rudolph. B.A., 1892; D.D., 1906, New York Uni-
versity. Attended Reformed Episcopal Seminary, Philadelphia, and
Princeton Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Bishop, Reformed Episco-
pal Church since 1909. Professor of Systematic Theology and Biblical
Theology, Philadelphia Reformed Episcopal Seminary.
231 W. 51st St., New York City.
Edith Parker Thomson. B.A., 1892, Wellesley College. Missionary.
Secretary, Woman's Baptist Missionary Society for the State of New Jersey.
106 High wood Ave., Ridgewood, N. J.
102 New York University
Rawson Warren. B.A., 1894, Leland Stanford Jr. University. Attended
Union Theological Seminary and General Theological Seminary. Cler-
gyman. First Lieutenant, Fourth Cavalry, U. S. Army.
Schofield Barracks, Hawaii Territory.
1897
James Oscar Boyd. B.A., 1895, New York University; B.D., 1899, D.D.,
1915, Princeton Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Instructor in Old
Testament, Princeton Theological Seminary, 1900- .
3 Evelyn Place, Princeton, N. J.
Adolph Henry Holthusen. B.A., 1891, Concordia College. Clergyman.
88 Lincoln Ave., Rockville Centre, L. I.
John Henry MacCracken. B.A., 189k, LL.D., 1915, New York University;
Ph.D., 1899, University of Halle-Wittenberg. Educator. Syndic, and
Professor of Politics, New York University, 1903-15. President,
Lafayette College, Easton, Pennsylvania, 1915- .
Easton, Pa.
John D. Melville (See Sc.D., 1901).
George Washington Osborn. B.A., 1895. Educator. Instructor, 1895-
99; Assistant Professor, 1899-05, Semitic Languages, New York Univer-
sity.
Westfield, N. J.
Frank Woodward Pine. B.A., 189 k, University of Michigan. Educator.
Head Master, Gilman Country School, Roland Park, Md.
Roland Park, Md.
William Edward Staub. B.A., 1887; M.A.t 1890, Bucknell University.
Media, Pa.
William Sydney Stevens. B.A., 1890, Washington College. Educator,
Instructor, Stuyvesant High School, New York City.
33 Greystone Park, Yonkers, N. Y.
Thomas Bennett Thomas.* B.A., 1883, Mount Union College; D.D.
Attended Western Theological Seminary (Allegheny, Pa.) and Union
Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor of Presbyterian Churches,
Wilkesbarre, Pa. and Monroe, N. Y.; pastor emeritus, Pittsburgh, Pa.,
1902-05.
d. September 6th, 1905, Pittsburgh, Pa.
The Graduate School 103
1898
Eric Bostroem (See Ph.D., 1902).
Osborn Marcus Curtis. B.A., 1887, Griswold College. Educator. In-
structor in English and Drawing, Curtis High School, New Brighton,
Staten Island.
6 Castleton Park, New Brighton, N. Y.
Edwin L. Earp. B.A., 1895, Dickinson 'College; B.D.— Ph.D., 1901*
University of Leipzig. Educator and Clergyman. Professor and head of
Department of Sociology, Syracuse University, 1901/.-09; Professor of
Christian Sociology, Drew Theological Seminary, 1909-.
Drew Theological Seminary, Madsion, N. J.
Louise Grace Farrant. B.A., 1893, Barnard College. Educator. Instruc-
tor, Girls' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
204 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Wright Fisher {See Ph.D., 1900).
Joseph Alotsius Fripp.* B.A., 1879, College of the City of New York.
Educator.
*d. 1910.
Walter James Greacen. B.A., 1896, New York University. Contractor.
Secretary, Treasurer and Director, Atlas Dredging Company, New York
City.
17 Marlborough Road, Flatbush, L. I.
Theodore Winfield Harris. B.A., 188b, Columbia University. Gradu-
ated from Union Theological Seminary in 1887. Clergyman. Pastor of
various churches since 1888; pastor, Oxford, N. Y., 1903-.
Oxford, N. Y.
Charles Theodore Hock {See Ph.D., 1902).
Carl W. Kinkeldy (See Ph.D., 1905).
Harry Cates Krowl (See Ph.D., 1900).
Henry Ludwig, Jr. B.S., 1889, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Principal, Public School No. 1^5, Brooklyn, N. Y.
775 Carroll St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Ernest Mannhardt. Attended Lutheran Seminary, Leipsic. Educator.
Instructor, Jamaica High School, Jamaica, L. I.
11 W. 103rd St., New York City.
104 New York University
Walter Martin Mohr. B.S., 1889, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1901, New York University. Lawyer. Practicing law, New York City.
125 Madison Ave., Elizabeth, N. J.
Charles Morris Myers. B.A., 1896, New York University. Attended
New Brunswick Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Teacher, Steele
College, Nagasaki, Japan, 1899-190A; Presbyterian Mission Press,
Shanghai, China, 190 k~-
18 Peking Road, Shanghai, China.
Willard Francis Ottarson. B.A., 1896, New York University. Gradu-
ated from Union Theological Seminary in 1899. Clergyman. In charge
of churches in New York, 1897-1912. Now dealer in art books, New York
City.
47 W. 34th St., New York City.
Joseph Dennis Reardon. B.S., 1889, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Principal, Public School No. 23, Manhattan, New York City.
438 W. 47th St., New York City.
Henry Watson Ruffner. B.A., 1895, Illinois College, B.D., 1897,
General Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Retired.
631 Vine St., Denver, Col.
Milton Sherk Runkle. B.A., 189k, Cornell College; B.D., 1897, Yale,
1898, General Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Rector of Holy Trinity
Church (P. E.), Alhambra, Cal.
Alhambra, Cal.
George Andrew Sawyer. Attended College of Arts and Pure Science, New
York University. Educator. Instructor, Commercial High School,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
183 Steuben St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
George Gurnee Seibert. B.A., 1889, New York University. Attended
New Brunswick Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Calvary
Reformed Church, Hagaman, N. Y.
Hagaman, Montgomery County, N. Y.
James Henry Shipley. B.S., 1896, New York University. Educator.
Instructor in Mathematics, Curtis High School, New Brighton, Staten
Island.
452 W. 152nd St., New York City.
Johan (Hans Henry) Spoer (See Ph.D., 1899).
Fay M. MacCracken Stockwell (Mrs. Frederick E.). B.A., 189k, Bryn
Mawr College. Attended Woman's Law Class, New York University.
Newburgh, N. Y.
The Graduate School 105
John Prentice Taylor. B.A., 1896, New York University; B.D., 1911,
Union Theological Seminary. Clergyman.
Leonia, N. J.
Frank David Torret. B.A., 1891, Syracuse University. Cleryman.
Pastor, Summerfield Methodist Episcopal Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.
117 St. James Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Frank D. Walter. B.A., 1891, Syracuse University.
John Henry Wilson. B.A., 1896, St. Stephen's College; graduated from
General Theological Seminary, 1899.
1899
Robert James Beach. B.A., 1890, Wesleyan University; B.D., 1893, Drew
Theological Seminary. Clergyman. In charge of churches in Connecti-
cut since 1891*. South Meriden, 1903- .
75 Fourth St., New Haven, Conn.
Sarah Drowne Belcher-Hardy (Mrs. Edward R.). B.A., 1887; M.D.,
1891, Boston University; LL.B., 1901, New York University. Physician
and Bacteriologist. Practicing medicine, New York City.
419 W. 118th St., New York City.
Henry Clarence Burr. B.L., 1897, Baldwin University; B.D., 1900,
Drew Theological Seminary. Educator. Professor of History, Mt. Union-
Scio College, Alliance, Ohio.
Alliance, Ohio.
James Francis Driscoll. S.T.D., 1888, Collegium Sancti Thomae de
Urbe (Rome). B.A., 1891, Montreal College. Clergyman. President of
St. Joseph's Theological Seminary, 1903-08; member of the Senate of
New York University, 1903-08. Rector, St. Gabriel's Church, New
Rochelle, N. Y.
St. Gabriel's Rectory, New Rochelle, N. Y.
Edward Slater Dunlap. B.A., 1897, St. Stephen's College; graduated from
General Theological Seminary, 1900. Clergyman. Associate Rector,
St. John's Church, Washington. Secretary of the Archdeaconry and
Lecturer of the National Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul.
2629 Garfield St., Washington, D. C.
Frederick Carl Eiselin. Custrin Gymnasium, Germany. Attended Drew
Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Professor of Semitic Languages
and Old Testament Exegesis, Garrett Biblical Institute.
Ev&nston, 111.
106 New York University
Arthur Forbes. B.S., 1863, College of the City of New York; Ph.D., 19U,
Oskaloosa College. Clergyman. Rector, Grace Church {Protestant
Episcopal), City Island, Bronx, New York City.
44 City Island Ave., Bronx, New York City.
George Milton Fowles. B.A., 1895; D.D., Mount Union College. Clergy-
man. Formerly Assistant Pastor, Methodist Episcopal Church, New
York City. Treasurer of the Board of Foreign Missions, Methodist
Episcopal Church, New York City.
150 Fifth Ave., New York City.
John Wesley Glenk. Ph.B., 1897. Attended Drew Theological Seminary.
Clergyman. Pastor of churches in Washington, Alaska, etc. Professor
of History, University of Puget Sound, 1901- .
La Comer, Washington.
Margaret Young Henry. B.A., 1897, Wellesley College. Educator.
Instructor, Wadleigh High School, New York City.
30 Townele Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
Charles E. Hesselgrave (See Ph.D., 1909).
Frederick William Hock (See Ph.D., 1907).
Hugo W. Hoffmann (See Ph.D., 1900).
Adaline Louise Jenckes. B.A., 1887, Vassar College.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Lillian Kupfer (See Ph.D., 1901).
Lincoln Chester Lemon. B.A., 1895, Nebraska Wesleyan University.
Rising City, Nebraska.
Jacob W. Loch (See Ph.D., 1900).
Eleanor P. Lumley (See Ph.D., 1900).
Miles Ernest Mitchell. B.A., 1896, Cornell College; B.D., 1899, Drew
Theological Seminary. Ordained elder, Methodist Episcopal Church.
Manufacturer.
Lake City, Iowa.
Henry Samuel Noon. B.A., 1896, Dickinson College. Clergyman. Pas-
tor, Philadelphia Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church.
40 W. State St., Media, Pa.
Kingora Obata. B.A., 1895, Baker University. Attended Drew Theological
Seminary. Educator. Professor at Ayoma College, Tokio, Japan.
Tokio, Japan.
The Graduate School 107
Naboth Osborne. B.A., 1897, Syracuse University; B.D., 1900, Yale.
Clergyman.
120 S. 16th St., Mattoon, 111.
Richard Stanley Povet. B.A., 1897, New York University. Clergyman'
Pastor, New York East Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church.
Westchester, Bronx, New York City.
Harold Milhoff Rider.* B.A., 1897, Ohio Wesleyan University; also
same year, Buchtel College; B.D., 1900, Drew Theological Seminary.
Fellow from Drew Theological Seminary, Studying at Oxford and Cam-
bridge Universities.
*d. April 25, 1912, Bay Shore, N. Y.
Alma Dora Schwab. B.A., 1896, Hunter College of the City of New York,
Masatake Shinoda. B.A., 1895, Doshisha University, Japan.
Louise Clinton Taylor. B. A., 1897, Vassar College. Educator. Teacher
of English, Dearborn-Morgan School, Orange, N. J.
103 Scotland Road, South Orange, N. J.
Willard J. Tompkins. B.A., 1897, Neiv York University; B.D., 1900,
Union Theological Seminary.
19 Townsend Ave., Stapleton, N. Y.
1900
John Baumeister. B.S., 1881, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, High School, Flushing, N. Y.
402 Amity St., Flushing, N. Y.
Patrick A. Beecher. Maynooth College, 1896. Clergyman. D.D. (Rome),
Professor of Pastoral Theology and Sacred Eloquence, St. Patrick's College,
Maynooth.
Maynooth, Dublin, Ireland.
Irene Brandon (Mrs. Leslie Graff). B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City
of New York.
315 Central Park West, New York City.
Ernest Brennecke (See Ph.D., 1901).
Joseph Thomas Brown, Jr. B.A., 1899; LL.B., 1892, New York University.
Lawyer. Practicing law, New York City.
Rochelle Park, New Rochelle, N. Y.
Clara Matilda Camp (Mrs. Herbert Mead). B.A., 1898, Normal College
of the City of New York. Formerly educator.
Riverview Manor, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.
108 New York University
Martha Belle Churchill. B.A., 1896, Syracuse University. Educator.
Instructor in Latin, Wadleigh High School, New York City.
611 W. 111th St., New York City.
Francis Treadway Clayton. B.A., 1896; B.D., 1900, Union Theological
Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, First Congregational Church, Williams-
town, Mass.
Willi amstown, Mass.
John Boardman Cottrell. B.A., 1893, Alfred University. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 19, Brooklyn, N. Y. President, Class
Teachers' Organization of Brooklyn.
315 W. 6th St., Plainfield, N. J.
Lillian May Elliot. Attended Hunter College of the City of New York,
Pd.M., 1893, New York University. Educator. Principal, Wadleigh
{Evening) High School.
The Ferncliff, 120th St. and Seventh Ave., New York City.
Eva Barbara Ernst (Mrs. Floyd J. Melvin). B.A., 1898, Hunter College
of the City of New York. Educator. Formerly Instructor in Mathematics,
Hunter College of the City of New York.
348 New York Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Homer Abial Flint. B.A., 1897, St. Stephens College; B.D., 1900, General
Theological Seminary. Clergyman.
Clarence (Galicenstein) Galston. B.S., 1895, College of the City of New
York; LL.B., 1899, New York University. Lawyer and Educator. For-
merly Instructor in the Department of Philosophy, College of the City of
New York. Lecturer on Patent Law, Brooklyn Law School. Practicing
law, New York City.
Woodmere, N. Y.
Charles LeRoy Goodell. B.A., 1877, Boston University; D.D., 1903»
Wesleyan University. Clergyman. Pastor, St. Paul's (M.E.) Church
New York City. Trustee, Drew Theological Seminary.
550 West End Ave., New York City.
Anna Esther Barnitz Gregorius (Mrs. Wm. P.). B.A., 1898, Hunter
College of the City of New York.
353 E. 15th St., New York City.
Elizabeth Hardin. B.A., 1892, Elmira College.
Seiji Hishida. B.A., 189^, Gifu Chugaku College, Japan. Studied for
Ph.D., at Columbia University.
10 W. 21st St., New York City.
The Graduate School 109
Maud Hopkins. B.A., 1898, Normal College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Training Department, Normal College of the City of
New York.
41 E. 76th St., New York City.
Otto Kinkeldy. B.A., 1898, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Professor, Royal Academic Institute for Church Music, University of
Breslau.
Breslau, Germany.
Grace H. Kupfer. B.A., 1892, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Principal, Alcuin School, New York City.
44 W. 97th St., New York City.
Carrie Elizabeth Logan (See Ph.D., 1902).
Robert Irwin MacBride. B.A., 1890, New York University; attended
Princeton Theological Seminary, 1890-91; graduated, 1893, from Union
Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Presbyterian Church, Stony
Point, N. Y.
Stony Point, N. Y.
Anna Teresa Lee O'Neill. B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 28, Manhattan, New
York City.
270 Montgomery St., Jersey City, N. J.
Rosella Constantina Reilly* B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of
New York.
d. October, 1913, New York City.
Harmon C. St. Clair. B.L., 1889, LL.B., 1891, University of Michigan,
Clergyman. Curate, Holy Innocents Church, Hoboken, N. J.
815 Sixth St., Hoboken, N. J.
Ner Wallace Stroup. B.A., 1898, Mount Union College. Attended Drew
Theological Seminary.
Grace A. Wellington. B.A., 1896, Vassar College. Educator. Head of
Literature Department, Miss Spence's School, New York City.
30 W. 55th St., New York City.
Donald Grant Whiteside. B.S., 1897, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor in English, College of the City of New York.
541 W. 124th St., New York City.
I90I
William Olin Allen. B.A., 189k, Kansas Wesleyan University; graduated,
1900, from Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, S. W.
Kansas, N. W. Kansas, and Oklahoma Conferences, Methodist Episcopal
Church.
110 New York University
Emil Emerson Camerer. LL.B., 1897; Ph.B., 1898. Educator. At one
time Principal, New York Preparatory School and of the Dwight School,
New York City. Lecturer on philosophical and literary topics.
140 Claremont Ave., New York City.
Orrok Paul Colloque (See Ph.D., 190b).
Charles Benjamin Dalton. B.A., 1896, Baker University. Graduate and
Fellow of Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Grace
Metlwdist Episcopal Church, Santa Barbara, Cal.
135 W. Figuera St., Santa Barbara, Cal.
Caroline Montgomery Dithridge. B.A., 1893, Hunter College of the
City of New York. Educator. Instructor in Latin, Manual Training
High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1114 E. 18th St., Flatbush, N. Y.
Charles Abbott Schneider Dwight. B.A., 1881; M.A., 1902, Yale Uni-
versity. Graduated, Union Theological Seminary, 188 If.. Clergyman.
Foreign missionary to Constantinople (American Board of Commissioners
for Foreign Missions). Pastor, Winchester, Mass., 1905- .
Winchester, Mass.
Edwin David Face. B.A., 1896, Syracuse University. Graduated, Drew
Theological Seminary, 1901. Clergyman. Formerly pastor, Central
N&w York Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church.
Fanchette L. Gauthey. B.A., 1898, Hunger College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 54, Manhattan, New
York City.
417 W. 121st St., New York City.
George Louis Hentz. B. A., 1898, St. Francis Xavier's College. Educator.
Principal, Public School No. 18, Manhattan, New York City.
8 St. Charles Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
John Beverly Jones. B.A., 1897, Baldwin University; graduate, Drew
Theological Seminary, 1901. Clergyman.
Fredericktown, Ohio.
Denorah Marian Joseph. B.A., 189k, Hunter College of the City of New
York; Pd.M., 1897, New York University. Educator. Instructor, Pub-
lic School No. 5Jf., Manhattan, New York City.
327 Central Park West, New York City.
Clara Elizabeth King. B.A., 1899, Vassar College.
160 W. 104th St., New York City.
The Graduate School 111
Grace Adams Knotts (Mrs. James E.) . Ph.B., 1891, Cornell College (Iowa) .
530 B. 17th St., Long Beach, Cal.
Calvin Leslie Lewis. B.A., 1890, Hamilton College. Educator. Upson
Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, Hamilton College; Director of the
Hamilton Summer School of English.
Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y.
Thomas James Maccabe. Ph.B., 1896; LL.B., 1899, New York University.
Lawyer. Practicing law, New York City.
178 W. 94th St., New York City.
Thomas Knox McClelland, Jr. B.A., 1899, New York University; M.A.,
1913, Columbia University, also Teachers' College Certificate in Education
same year. Educator. Principal, Montgomery School, Newark, N. J.
35 Treacy Ave., Newark, N. J.
Martha Hill McFarland. B.A., 1888, Wellesley College. Educator.
Instructor in Rye Seminary, Rye, N. Y .
Cambridge, N. Y.
William Henry McMaster. Ph.B., 1899, Mt. Union College; B.D., 1902,
Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman and Educator. President, Mt.
Union College, Alliance, Ohio, 1909-.
Alliance, Ohio.
Flora Anna Molwitz. B.A., 1897, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public Scfwol No. 1$, Bronx, New York City.
88 E. 165th St., New York City.
Vincent Noll* B.A ., 1899, New York University.
*d. 1902.
Joseph Waite Presby. Ph.B., 1890, Illinois Wesleyan University. At-
tended New Hampshire Conference Seminary. Clergyman. Formerly
Professor of Philosophy and Principal, Normal ScJiool, Taylor Univer-
sity. Pastor in Genesee Conference, Pennsylvania.
Eldred, Pa.
Elizabeth Mary Prew. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 28, Manhattan, Nev)
York City.
597 E. 134th St., New York City.
112 New York University
James Overton Reavis. B.A., 1896, M.A., 1897, Westminster College;
B.D., Presbyterian Theological Seminary. (Louisville, Ky.), 1899; B.D.,
Princeton Theological Seminary, 1901; D.D., Austin College (Texas),
1908; LL.B. Has been admitted to the Bar of South Carolina. Clergyman
and Educator. Formerly, Secretary, Board of Foreign Missions, Southern
Presbyterian Church. At present, Professor of English Bible, Homoletics
and Pastoral Theology in Columbia (S. C.) Theological Seminary.
Columbia, S. C.
Joanna Ashton Reed. B.A., 1893, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator . Instructor, Normal College of the City of New York.
Woodbridge Place, Leonia, N. J.
Logan H. Roberts. B.A., 1899, Nebraska Wesleyan University.
Wilhelm Otto George Sanft. Stargard Gymnasium (Germany), 1885;
Berlin University, 1888. Clergyman.
73 McAdoo Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
John Orvis Scudder. B.A., 1899, New York University.
441 Dunham Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
William Washington Shenk. B.A., 1895, Nebraska Wesleyan University;
B.D., 1901, Drew Theological Seminary; Ph.D., 1905, Boston University.
Clergyman. Pastor, M.E. Church, Flagstaff, Arizona.
Flagstaff, Arizona.
Albert Shiels. B.A., 1886, C. C. N. Y.; Pd.M., 1900, New York Uni-
versity. Educator. District Superintendent in charge of Evening Schools,
New York City.
71 Lexington Ave., New York City.
Louise Jennie Starkweather. B.A., 188%., Vassar College. Educator.
Instructor, High School, East Orange, N. J.
UN. Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J,
Edgar Trotter Van Dusen. B.A., 1892, Princeton University.
115 Broadway, New York City.
William Weinberger. M.D., 189k, University of Vienna. Physician.
Practicing in New York City.
252 Willis Ave., Bronx, New York City.
Edith Riker Wilson. Attended Packer Institute, Brooklyn. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 13, Bronx, New York City.
119 Crary Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
The Graduate School 113
1902
Julia Elizabeth Baese. B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Formerly instructor, Public School No. 6, Manhattan,
New York City.
93 Second Ave., New York City.
Sadie Boehm. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Formerly instructor, New York City Schools.
215 W. 98th Street, New York City.
Mary Carlisle Calhoun. B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 32, Bronx, New York
City.
560 W. 163rd St., New York City.
Gustav Arnold Carstensen (See Ph.D., 1901+).
Betsey Buchanan Davis. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Formerly Associate Professor of Latin, Hunter College
of the City of New York. Retired, 1910.
Montvale, N. J.
John Joseph Dempsey. B.S., 1899, St. Francis" College. Educator. Prin-
cipal, Public School No. 85, Long Island City, N. Y.
1243 Simpson St., Bronx, New York City.
Leah Johanna Dreyfus (Mrs. Samuel Landauer). B.A., 1900, Hunter
College of the City of New York. Educator. Formerly instructor, Public
School No. 29, Manhattan, New York City.
161 Heights Road, Ridgewood, N. J.
Louis Alfred Ensley. Ph.B., 1897, Scio College; B.D., 1902, Drew Theo-
logical Seminary. Clergyman.
Chesterville, Ohio.
Jacob Finger. B.A., 1900, Syracuse University; graduate, Drew Theological
Seminary, 1902. Clergyman. Pastor, Vermont Conference, Methodist
Episcopal Church.
Bakersfield, Vermont.
Maud A. Fischer. B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 5^, Manhattan, New York City.
33 W. 92nd St., New York City.
Henry Friedman. B.S., 1898, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 22, Manhattan, New York City.
517 E. 9th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
114 New York University
Myra Esther Grigg (Mrs. J. H. Anderson). B.A., 1899, Hunter College of
the City of New York. Educator. Formerly instructor in New York City
Schools; superintendent of Junior Christian Endeavor work of the Fifth
District, New York City.
New York City.
Louise Entwisle Growoll. B.A., 1897, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 135, Manhattan, New
York City.
1820 Anthony Ave., Bronx, New York City.
Edna Hildreth. B.A., 1899, Syracuse University.
228 Gregory Ave., Passaic, N. J.
Amie Myra Hoffman (Mrs. Herman Chaves). B.A., 1899, Hunter College
of the City of New York. Educator. Formerly instructor, Public School
No. 30, Manhattan, New York City.
29 E. 124th St., New York City.
Ernest Ilgen. B.A., 1882, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Associate Professor of German, College of the City of New York.
1356 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Samuel Trevena Jackson. Ph.B., 1896, Illinois Wesley an University;
B.D., 191^, Brew Theological Seminary. Clergyman.
Hackettstown, N. J.
James Jenkins.* B.A., 1879, Colby University. Clergyman.
*d. Feb. 7, 1913, Brooktyn, N. Y.
Ellen Langdon. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 93, Manhattan, N. Y.
301 W. 107th St., New York City.
Maude Simonton Lyon. B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of New
York.
Lyons, Somerset Co., New York.
Fred Charles Macdonald. Ph.B., 1900; Pd.M., 1901, New York Uni-
versity. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 72, Brooklyn, N. Y.
44 McDonough St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Regina Mailhouse. B.A., 1892, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 5, Manhattan, New York City.
565 W. 183rd St., New York City.
Robert Beard Marvin. B.A., 1892; M.A., 1895, Hamilton College. Edu-
cator. Instructor, in German, Commercial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
826 Marcy Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School • 115
Abbaham Elijah Neugboschl. B.A., 1900, Columbia University. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 28, Bronx, New York City.
2957 Bainbridge Ave., New York City.
Mabt M. O'Loughlin. B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of New York.
64 Fifth Ave., New York City.
Winifbed H. Phillips (Mrs. George A. Hathaway). B.A., 1893, Hunter
College of the City of New York. Educator. Formerly tutor, Hunter
College of the City of New York.
402 W. 148th St., New York City.
Robebt Gbey Powebs. B.A., 1898, St. Francis Xaviers College. Educator.
Principal, Public School No. 1+9, Manhattan, New York City.
56 Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Anna Elizabeth Ray. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New York;
M.D., 1906, Cornell University. Physician. Practicing medicine, New
York City.
834 E. 155th St., New York City.
Chables Raymond Ross. B.A., 1900, Mount Union College; B.D., 1901,
Drew Theological Seminary; Ph.D., 1910, Grove City College. Clergy-
man. Pastor, Mamaroneck Methodist Episcopal Church.
Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Maby M. Schnepel. B.A., 1897, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Grade teacher in New York City Schools.
353 W. 117th St., New York City.
Alexis Eugene Senftneb (See Ph.D., 1901f).
Jeannette Shonnabd Sewall (Mrs. Edwin H. Davis). B.A., 1893, Hunter
College of the City of New York. Educator. Formerly tutor in Latin,
Normal College of the City of New York.
Montvale, N. J.
Helen Mabgabet Smith (Mrs. Edward Tomlinson). B.A., 1893, Hunter
College of the City of New York. Educator. Formerly instructor, Public
School No. 137, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Pound Ridge, N. Y.
Lillian M. Snow. B.A., 1893, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Associate Professor and Registrar, Hunter College of the City
of New York.
434 W. 120th St., New York City.
Lucy Stoddabd. B.A., 1897, Smith College.
22 W. 68th St., New York City.
116 New York University
Gordon Lewis Thompson. B.A., 1892, Wesleyan University; B.D., 1902,
Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, M. E. Church, Pat-
chogue, N. Y.
19 Gerard Court, Patchogue, N. Y.
Mabel Emeline Tyndall (Mrs. Frank H. Mills). B.A., 1898, Hunter Col-
lege of the City of New York. Educator. Formerly instructor, New York
City Schools.
144 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J.
Aidna Van Orden. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 93, Manhattan, New York City.
Leonia, N. J.
Mary Holland Watson. B.A., 1899, Radclijfe College. Educator. In-
structor in English, DeWitt Clinton High School, New York City.
71 E. 87th St., New York City.
Cornelia Fowler White. B.A., 1892, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Bryant High School, Long Island City,
N. Y.
2 E. 97th St., New York City.
1903
Francis Earl Ad ell.* B.A., 1899, Baker University. Attended Drew Theo-
logical Seminary. Clergyman.
*d. February 24th, 1905.
Emma Brod. B.A., 1898, Normal College of the City of New York.
168 W. 77th St., New York City.
John Bancroft Devins.* B.A., 1882 (nunc pro tunc), New York University;
graduate, 1887, Union Theological Seminary; D.D., 1901, Centre College;
LL.D., 1909, Huron College. Editor. Connected with the "Tribune"
and the "Observer'" New York City, and several religious publications.
Interested in various movements, such as the Association for Improving
the Condition of the Poor, the National Child Labor Committee. Was
Corresponding Secretary of the American Institute of Christian Philosophy,
1890-96.
*d. August 26th, 1911.
Stella Sabina Dreyfus (Mrs. R. S. Koch). B.A., 1898, Hunter College
of the City of New York. Educator. Formerly instructor, Public School
No. 13, Manhattan, New York City.
220 W. 107th St., New York City.
The Graduate School 117
Matthew Joseph Duggan. B.A., 1899, Manhattan College. Attended St.
Joseph's Seminary, Yonkers, N. Y. Clergyman.
221 W. 107th St., New York City.
Mabel Elkus (Mrs. H. S. Eisman). B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City
of New York.
981 Park Ave., New York City.
Edward Endelman. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1906, New York University. Lawyer. Practicing law, New York City.
2441 Seventh Ave., New York City.
Daniel Ephraim Ewald. B.A., 1888, University of Michigan; Pd.M.,
1904, New York University. Educator. Head Master, Prospect Height
School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1211 Avenue N, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Orlando Eaton Ferry. B.A., 1895; M.A., 1898, Hamilton College. Edu-
cator. Instructor in English, Erasmus Hall High School, Brooklyn, N. Y .
1609 Avenue N, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Christobel Flood. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Assistant Professor of Latin, Hunter College of the City of
New York.
468 E. 134th St., New York City.
Julius Gottlieb (See Ph.D., 1904).
Mary Veronica Green. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 54, Manhattan, New
York City.
478 W. 159th St., New York City.
Max B. Greenstein. B.S., 1899, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Washington Irving High School, New York City.
860 E. 161st St., New York City.
James Albert Hamilton (See Ph.D., 1909).
Lefferd Merle Alexander Haughwout. B.A., 1899, Washington and
Jefferson College. Attended General Theological Seminary. Clergyman.
Rector, Christ Church, Meadville, Pa.
Christ Church Rectory, 868 Diamond Square, Meadville, Pa.
Harry Eldridge Herman. B.A., 1900, College of the City of New York;
LL.B., 1903, New York University. Lawyer. Practicing law, New
York City.
Mamaroneck, N. Y.
118 New York University
Dorothea Caroline Hess. B.A., 1897, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor in English, Hunter College of the City of
New York.
621 Lefferts Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y.
Samuel Hoffman. B.A., 1896, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1898, New York University. Educator. Instructor, Public School No.
2k, Manhattan, New York City.
1550 Bryant Ave., Bronx, New York City.
Charles Herbert Johnson. B.A., 1898, ML Allison College, Sackville,
N. B. Clergyman.
Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, Canada.
Marion Augustus Johnston. Ph.B., 1900, Illinois Wesley an University.
Clergyman. Pastor, Trinity M. E. Church, Passaic, N. J.
129 Autumn St., Passaic, N. J.
Sarah Jane Johnston. B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 13, Bronx, New York City, and
Principal, Vacation School in the Bronx and Evening Recreation Centre
for Women and Girls, Manhattan, New York City.
842 E. 225th St., New York'City.
Joseph Kahn (See Ph.D., 190$.
Max Kufeld. B.A., 1900, College of the City of New York; LL.B., New
York Law School. Educator and Lawyer. Instructor, Public School
No. 2, Manhattan, New York City. Practicing law, New York City.
1230 Park Ave., New York City.
George Francis Lee. B.A., 1901, New York University; B.D., 1907,
Union Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Evangelistic work.
Montpelier, Indiana.
D wight Ralston Little. B.A., 1900, Williams College; Pd.M., 190k*
New York University. Educator. Instructor Polytechnic Preparatory
School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
377 Westminster Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Henry Neumann (See Ph.D., 1906).
John Baker Opdycke. B.A., 1898; M.A., 1901, Franklin and Marshall
College. Educator. Chairman, English Department, Julia Richman
High School, New York City.
65 Broadway, New York City.
The Graduate School 119
John T. Prout. M.A., 1903, St. Marys College; graduated, 1901, from St.
Joseph's Seminary (Yonkers, N. Y.). Clergyman. Rector and founder
of Bohemian Church of St. John the Martyr, New York City.
250 E. 72nd St., New York City.
John Stacy Roberts. B.S., 1895, College of the City of New York; Pd.M.,
1902, New York University. Educator. District Superintendent, New
York City Schools.
21 Beekman Place, New York City.
Howard Victor Ross. B.A., 1900, Mt. Union College. Clergyman. Con-
nected with the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Louis Oscar Rotenbach. B.A., 1891, New York University; graduated,
189 U, Union Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Bethany {Pres-
byterian) Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.
525 Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Theodore Leslie Shear. B.A., 1900, New York University; Ph.D., 1904,
Johns Hopkins University. Educator. Associate in Classical Philology,
Barnard College, Columbia University, New York City.
468 Riverside Drive, New York City.
Emma J. Schoedde. Attended Cassel (Germany) Hunter College, 1889. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Morris High School, Bronx, New York City.
1350 Fulton Ave., Bronx, New York City.
Caroline Carrington Truax. B.A., M.L., 1890, Convent of Notre Dame.
Graduate, Woman's Law Class, New York University, 1895.
667 Madison Ave., New York City.
George Godhart Vogel. B.A., 1895; D.D., 1910, New York University.
Clergyman. Pastor, Centenary (M. E.) Church, Newark, N. J.
202 Summer St., Newark, N. J.
Charles Waldron. Ph.B., 1898, Illinois Wesleyan University; B.D., 1894,
Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman.
213 Heberton Ave., West Brighton, N. Y.
Frederick Wilhelm Wehse. Attended University of Breslau (Germany).
Educator.
538 Second St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Marie Bianchi Widmayer. B.A., 1898, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor in Latin, Hunter College of the City of
New York.
61 W. 92nd St., New York City.
120 New York University
1904
Violet R. Alsberg (Mrs. Louis Jersawitz). B.A., 1900, Hunter College of
the City of New York. Formerly educator.
86 W. 119th St., New York City.
Ralph Campbell. B.A., 1898, New York University. Educator. In-
structor in German, DeWitt Clinton High School, New York City.
706 W. 179th St., New York City.
Jane Gray Carter (See Ph.D., 1910).
John Joseph Donlan. B.A., 1903, St. Francis Xavier's College.
Homer K. Ebright. B.A., 1900, Baker University; B.D., 190k, Drew
Theological Seminary. Clergyman and Educator. Professor of Greek,
Baker University, Baldwin City, Kansas, 1906-.
Baldwin City, Kansas.
Frederic Samuel Grow. B.A., 1891, University of Vermont. Educator.
Instructor in Latin and Mathematics, DeWitt Clinton High School, New
York City.
Maplewood, N. J.
Jesse Ho yt Haley. B. A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Morris High School, Bronx, New York City.
782 E. 175th St., New York City.
Kate Louise Hartt. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor in Latin, Hunter College of the City of
New York.
127 E. 72nd St., New York City.
Frederick John Hubach. Ph.B., 1901, Central Wesleyan University; B.D.,
1898, Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, First Methodist
Episcopal Church, Newark Conference, Phillipsburg, N. J.
289 S. Main St., Phillipsburg, N. J.
May Agnes Ingenthron. B.A., 1900, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Head of Department, Public School No. 31, Manhattan,
New York City.
278 W. 19th St., New York City.
Joseph Liebergall. B.S., 1901, College of the City of New York. LL.B.,
1905, New York University.
The Graduate School 121
Henry Noble MacCracken. B.A., 1900, L.H.D., 1915, New York Uni-
versity; Ph.D., 1907, Harvard University. Educator. Instructor, Syrian
Protestant College, Beirut, 1900-03; Instructor, 1908-10, Assistant Pro-
fessor of English, 1910-February 191k, Yale University; Professor of
English Language and Literature, Smith College, February 191^-February
1915. President of Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., February 1915-,
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Marion Jacob Mayo. B.A., 1899, Lebanon University; Pd.M., 1902,
Pd.D., 1903, New York University. Educator. Instructor, Eastern
District High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
179 Marcy Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Carleton McKee. B.A., 1900, Princeton University. Social
Worker. Secretary of the Courts Committee of the Department of Social
Betterment, Brooklyn Bureau of Charities.
214 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Albert Amedee Meras (See Ph.D., 1908).
Julia Meyer. B.A., 1901, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Anna Lee Mix (Mrs. Clayton R. Lusk). B.A., 1896, Hunter College of
the City of New York. Formerly educator.
38 W. Court St., Cortlandt, N. Y.
Thomas John Mulvey. Bachelor of Theology, 1896, College of Propaganda,
Rome. Attended St. Mary's College (Pennsylvania). Clergyman.
Chaplain, King's County Penitentiary, Brooklyn, N. Y.
108 St. Edward's St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Kaju Nakamura. B.F.S., 1900, Imperial Fishery College, Tokio, Japan.
Journalist and Fishery Investigator.
Imperial Fishery College, Tokio, Japan.
Earle Fenton Palmer. B.S., 1888, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor in English, College of the City of New York.
828 St. Nicholas Ave., New York City.
Abraham Rudy. Pd.M., 1901; Pd.D., 1902, New York University. Educa-
tor. Supervising teacher for Pueblo Macabebe, 1905-06. Instructor,
A. & M. College, West Raleigh, N. C, 1907-1915.
840 Dawson St., Bronx, New York City.
H. Elizabeth Seelman (Mrs. Clarence Darwin Kingsley). B.A., 1898,
Wellesley College. Formerly educator.
65 Langdon St., Cambridge, Mass.
122 New York University
Theresa Seligman. B.A., 1901, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 77, Manhattan, New York City.
124 E. 80th St., New York City.
Gideon Barto Stone. Ph.B., 1901, Grant University; B.D., 1901, Drew
Theological Seminary. Educator. President of Cookman Institute,
Jacksonville, Florida.
Jacksonville, Fla.
William Volckhausen. B.S., 1896, College of the City of New York;
LL.B., 1903, New York University. Educator. Instructor, Morris
High School, New York City.
433 W. 162nd St., New York City.
David Trout Weidner. B.A., 1901, New York University. Attended
Union Theological Seminary. Graduate of General Theological Seminary,
1903. Clergyman.
Helmetta, N. J.
Augusta Manie Wilson (See Ph.D., 1908).
1905
Alice I. Adams.* Pd.B., 1897; Pd.M., 1898, Albany Normal College. B.S.,
190k; Pd.D., 1905, New York University. Formerly educator.
Deceased.
James H. Allen. B.S., 1901, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Murray Hill Vocational School, New York City.
68 Halsey St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Clara Byrnes. B.A., 1893, Hunter College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Associate Professor of Hygiene, Hunter College of the City of New
York.
776 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Edgar James Curry. B.A., 1901, Ohio Wesleyan University; B.D., 190^,
Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Franklin Methodist
Episcopal Church, Brockton, Massachusetts.
17 Snow Ave., Brockton, Mass.
Mary Ursula Everett (Sister M. Agnes). B.A., 1902, Hunter College
of the City of New York. Educator. Now in Ursuline Convent, Bedford
Park, N. Y.
Mt. St. Ursula, Bedford Park, N. Y.
William C. Hagen. B.S., 1901, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor of graduating class, Public School No. 93, Brooklyn,
N. Y.
140 Herkimer St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
I1 he Graduate School 123
Matthew Carter Hamilton. B.A., 1901, Thiel College. Educator.
Principal, Grove Street School, Irvington, N. J.
801 S. 12th St., Newark, N. J.
Phil Harold Hembdt. B.A., 1901, New York University. Educator.
Formerly, Director of the Department of English, State Normal School,
Superior, Wis. Since 1913, Professor of English and Oratory, Albion
College, Albion, Mich.
Albion, Mich.
William Krampner. B.A., 1897, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1901, New York University. Educator. Principal, Public School No.
20, Manhattan, New York City.
123 W. 115th St., New York City.
Marguerite Thornron Lee. B.S., 189k, Cornell University; Ph.D., 191b>
Columbia University. Educator. Head of Department of Biology^
Girls' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
66 W. 95th St., New York City.
Julius Otis Mageworth. B.A., 1898, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Manual Training High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
902 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
James H. McDonald. B.A., 1902, St. John's College (Fordham). Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. H, Bronx, New York City.
2391 Tiebout Ave., New York City.
Thomas R. Moore (See Ph.D., 1906).
Nathaniel Pasternack. B.A., 1898, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Boys' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
303 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Joseph Remey. B.A., 1897, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 20, Manhattan, New York City.
167 E. 90th St., New York City.
Lilt Marguerite Schodts. B.A., 1903, Hunter College of the City of New
York.
50 Morningside Ave., New York City.
Alice S. Sullivan. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 95, Manhattan, New York City.
59 W. 12th St., New York City.
Giles J. Swan. B.A., 1897, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Principal, Public School No. i-4-4. Brooklyn, N. Y.
259 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
124 New York University
Elnece M. Weeden. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 18, Bronx, New York City.
211 W. 101st St., New York City.
Walter Dewey Wheat. B.A., 188%, Williams College. Educator. For-
merly instructor. Public School No. 9, Bronxl, New York City.
Liberty Corner, N. J.
William T. Whitney (See Ph.D., 1908).
1906
Martha Adler (See Ph.D., 1913).
William Cremer Allen. B.S., 1895, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Principal, Public School No. 93, Brooklyn, N. Y.
68 Halsey St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Alexander Boecker (See Ph.D., 1912).
Edwin A. Bolger. B.A., 1900; M.A., 1902, Manhattan College. Educator.
Instructor, Commercial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
426 Kosciusko St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Edna Boyden. B.A., 1903, Hunter College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 32, Bronx, New York City.
Crestwood, Bronxville, N. Y.
Maurice A. Brandt. B. A., 1898, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1902, New York University. Educator. Instructor, Public School
No. 188, Manhattan, New York City.
142 W. 112th St., New York City.
Alma M. Bullowa. B.A., 190k, Hunter College of the City of New York'
Educator. Tutor in English, Hunter College of the City of New York.
125 E. 72nd St., New York City.
Joseph T. P. Callahan. B.S., 1902, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 53, Bronx, New York City.
5625 Newton Ave., New York City.
Abner Cassen. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 33, Bronx, New York City.
90 Pinehurst Ave., New York City.
Christopher D. Collins.* B.S., 1898, College of the City of New York.
Formerly educator.
Deceased.
The Graduate School 125
Leon John Cook. Pd.B., 1897, New York State Normal College; B.A., 1902,
Harvard University. Educator. Superintendent of Schools, East Bloom-
field, N. Y.
East Bloomfield, N. Y.
Olla Capron Cooper (Mrs. David K.). B.L., 1891, Cornell University.
134 Beaver St., Beaver, Pa.
Henry N. Davidson (See Ph.D., 1908).
Hazel E. Dennis. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Formerly instructor, Public School No. 2, Manhattan, New
York City.
Grace Pascal Ford. B.A., 1892, Rutgers Female College. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 1+3, Bronx, New York City.
14 W. 127th St., New York City.
Elizabeth R. Gannon. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 13, Brooklyn, N. Y.
442 Sackett St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Edoardo San Giovanni (See Ph.D., 1908).
Charles Jerome Holland. B.A., 1903, New York University. Lawyer.
Practicing law, New York City.
102 Madison Ave., New York City.
Erminie Hollis. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Formerly instructor, Public School No. 1^, Manhattan, New
York City.
Anna Elizabeth Hudson. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 3, Manhattan, New York
City.
202 W. 103rd St., New York City.
Loretto C Hunt. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Assistant to Principal, Public School No. 17, Manhattan,
New York City.
78 Jane St., New York City.
Stella D. Kisch. B.A., 190 % Hunter College of the City of New York; B.S.,
1911, Teachers College (Columbia). Educator. Physical Director of the
Hebrew Technical School for Girls, New York City.
Palisade, N. J.
Abraham Landesman. B.S., 1902, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 18, and Principal, Evening School
No. £9, Manhattan, New York City.
408 Manhattan Ave., New York City.
126 New York University
Elias Lieberman (See Ph.D., 1911).
Joseph Loew. B.S., 1903, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, High School of Commerce, New York City.
410 Central Park West, New York City.
Simon S. Lowenstein. B.S., 1899, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 160, Manhattan, New York City.
517 E. 9th St., New York City.
Vernon Monroe McCombs. B.A., 1903, Hamline University; B.D., 1906*
Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. District Superintendent'
Spanish and Portuguese District, Los Angeles, California.
1110 Wright & Calendar Building, Los Angeles, Cal.
Cornelia Eliza MacMullan (See Ph.D., 1908).
C. Harper McCrea. B.A., 1903, Hamline University; B.D., 1906, Drew
Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, First Methodist Episcopal
Church, Detroit, Michigan.
Detroit, Mich.
Minnie Obermeier. B.A., 1901, Hunter College of the City of New York-'
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 3, Manhattan, New York City.
550 W. 157th St., New York City.
William P. O'Ryan. B.A., 1899; M.A., 1901, Manhattan College. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Commercial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1051 Prospect Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Samuel White Patterson (See Ph.D., 1913).
Frederick B. Robinson (See Ph.D., 1907).
Joseph M. Tilden. B.S., 1895, Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Salesman.
Sales Manager, American Sanitary Works, New York City.
105 W. 40th St., New York City.
Helen Tompkins. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Formerly instructor, Public School No. 15, Manhattan, New
York City.
Annis Matilda Townsend. B.A., 1900, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor in English and Mathematics, Northfield
Seminary, East Northfield, Mass.
La Grangeville, Dutchess County, N. Y.
Samuel Viertel. B.S., 1898, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Principal, Public School No. 11, and of Vacation School No. 83, Man-
hattan, New York City.
325 W. 93rd St., New York City.
The Graduate School 127
Walter Atwood Wight. B.A., 1899, Harvard University. Educator.
Instructor in French, Erasmus Hall High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
399 Coney Island Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
IQ07
Israel Andron. B.A., 190 k, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 19, Manhattan, New York City, and New
Lots Evening High School.
236 Fifth Ave., New York City.
Euphrosyne Bown. B.S., 1906, New York University. Educator.
138 Pequonnock St., Bridgeport, Conn.
George P. A. Brayden. B.A., 1903, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 186, Manhattan, New York City.
228 W. 135th St., New York City.
Rose H. Cahill. Ph.B., 1886, Cornell University. Educator. Instructor.
Girls' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
427 Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Mary Genevieve Clarke. B.A., 1893, Wilson College for Women.
95 Anderson St., Hackensack, N. J.
Abraham Cohen. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 46, Bronx, New York City.
2 W. 119th St., New York City.
Benjamin Garrison Demarest (See Ph.D., 1908).
Elizabeth Regina Donovan. B.A., 1901, Hunter College of the City of
New York. Educator. Principal, Public School No. 2, Bronx, New York
City.
390 Wadsworth Ave., New York City.
Lily Edelstein. B.A., 190k, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Evelyn G. Flynn (Mrs. H. L. Bailey). B.A., 1903, Hunter College of the
City of New York.
Brielle, N. J.
Maxwell L. Heller. B.A., 1901, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Evander Childs High School, Bronx, New York City.
941 Simpson St., New York City.
Paul Klapper (See Ph.D., 1909).
Marella W. Kramer (Mrs. Wright B. Haff). B.A., 1903, Hunter College
of the City of New York. Formerly educator.
256 W. 139th St., New York City.
128 New York University
James Edward Magee. B.L., 1896, Earlham College. Educator.
37 State St., Bloomfield, N. J.
Jane Dawes Manning. B.A., 190 h Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 7, Manhattan, New York City.
2862 Boulevard, Jersey City, N. J.
Anna Ida Marks. B.A., 1901, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Gabriel R. Mason (See Ph.D., 1911).
Emma H. Mathewson. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 12, Bronx, New York City.
2024 Creston Ave., New York City.
Julia V. O'Connell. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 33, Manhattan, New York City.
83 Norwood Ave., Stapleton, N. Y.
Lillian Raffel. B.A., 190b, Hunter College of the City of New York.
295 Grove St., Jersey City, N. J.
Francis L. Rougier (See Ph.D., 1911).
Jeannette Seligman. B.A., 190k, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 96, Manhattan, New York City.
124 E. 80th St., New York City.
Leon Sinagnan. B.A., 1896, Central College of Constantinople. Educator.
Instructor, High School of Commerce, New York City.
452 W. 149th St., New York City.
Katherine Clare Snively. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of Neio
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 14-, Manhattan, New
York City.
347 Manhattan Ave., New York City.
Jeremiah Edward Stine. B.A., 1903, Dickinson College; B.D., 1908, Drew
Theological Seminary.
La Fayette Talbot. Pd.M., 1895; Pd.D., 1898; B.S., 1905, New York
University. Educator. Principal, Hoboken High School.
1020 Hudson St., Hoboken, N.J.
Edward C. Worden. Phar.C, 1896, University of Michigan. Chemist,
Clark Thread Co., Newark, N. J.
Milburn, N. J.
Edith Janet Wright. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New York-
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 90. Manhattan, New York City-
263 W. 88th St., New York City.
The Graduate School 129
1908
Albert Bauman. B.A., 190k, University of Michigan; B.D., 1907, Drew.
Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, First Methodist Episcopal
Church, Durand, Illinois.
Durand, 111.
George I. Brinkerhoff (See Ph.D., 191k).
Robert Bernard Brodie. B.S., 1903, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 62 (Grammar), Manhattan,
New York City.
631 E. 168th St., New York City.
Adaline May Conway (See Ph.D., 1911).
Abraham Jay Demarest. B.S., 1906, New York University.
1017 Bloomfield St., Hoboken, N. J.
William P. F. Dooley. B.A., 1897, Manhattan College. Clergyman.
345 W. 25th St., New York City.
Thomas Lewis Doyle. B.A., 1906, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Special instructor in Music, Brooklyn Public Schools.
492 Halsey St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Joseph B. Goldstein (name changed to Golan). B.A., 190k, College of the
City of New York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 109, Man-
hattan, New York City.
50 E. 119th St., New York City.
Owen Augustine Haley. B.A., 1905, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. k6, Manhattan, New York City.
305 E. 161st St., New York City.
Jeannette Hamill. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New York;
LL.B., 1903; J.D., 1905, New York University. Educator. Assistant
in Economics, School of Commerce, Accounts and Finance, New York City.
32 Waverly Place, New York City.
C. Edward Jones (See Ph.D., 1911).
Samuel Katz (See Ph.D., 1909).
Edward J. Kehoe. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 123, Manhattan; Principal, Evening School
for Men and Boys, Brooklyn, New York City.
444 Putnam Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
130
New York University
B.A., 1903, College of
Josephine E. Kopankiewicz (Mrs. J. N. McVeigh).
the City of New York.
412 Avenue C, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Philip L. Lipshitz. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 8k, Brooklyn, N. Y.
640 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Maximilian J. Lustgarten. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York,
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 23, Manhattan, New York City.
39 Lee Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
John D'Arcy McGee. B.L., 1890, Laval University. Educator. In-
structor, Public School No. k2, Bronx, New York City.
2787 Briggs Ave., New York City.
Olga Marx. B.A., 1899, Hunter College of the City of New York. Pd.M.,
1903; Pd.D., 1905; B.S., 1907, New York University. Educator. In-
structor, Public School No. 89, Manhattan, New York City.
2041 Washington Ave., New York City.
John Nehrbas. B.S., 1882, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 29, Bronx, New York City.
3020 Bainbridge Ave., New York City.
Edwin Wintermute Oliver. B.S., 1906, New York University. Educator.
Principal, Public School No. 9, Hoboken, N. J.
1305 Bloomfield, St., Hoboken, N. J.
Robert Louis Rappeport. B.A., 1905, College of the City of New York.
500 Fifth Ave., New York City.
Jean Fleming Robertson. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Hunter College of the City of New York.
23 W. 65th St., New York City.
Max I. Rosenhaus. B.S., 190k, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Bushwick High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
213 Henry St., New York City.
Ignatz Satmon (See Ph.D., 1911).
Arthur Selwyn-Brown (See Ph.D., 1909).
Ada M. Sill. B.A., 1900, Hunter College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 15, Manhattan, New York City.
1824 Crotona Ave., New York City.
Gustav A. Stumpf. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 15, Brooklyn, N. Y,
1053 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School 131
Charles Augustus Tonsor, Jr. (See Ph.D., 1911).
Clifford W. Williams. B.S., 1903, Dakota Wesleyan University; B.D.,
1906, Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, First Methodist
Episcopal Church, Garfield, Washington.
Box 534, Garfield, Washington.
Ruby Millicent Wrede. B.A., 190k, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 37, Manhattan, New
York City.
7 Sylvan Place, New York City.
IQ09
Henry J. Ackerman. B.A., 1901, Syracuse University. Educator. Super-
vising Principal, Public Schools, Great Neck, N. Y.
Arrandale Ave., Great Neck, N. Y.
Bruno J. Albrecht. B.A., 190 %, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 62, Manhattan, New York City.
1753 E. 7th St., New York City.
Edward Hiry Alexander. B.S., 1908, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 144> Brooklyn, N. Y.
653 St. John's Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Laura C. Browning. B.S., 1907, New York University.
"The Montague," 103 Montague St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
John A. Burkhardt. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Educa-
tor. Instructor, Public School No. 132, Manhattan, New York City.
2162 La Fontaine Ave., New York City.
Gustav Calman. B.A., 1907, New York University.
Bernard Cohen. (Name changed to Colten in 1911.) B.A., 1903, College
of the City of New York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 109,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
1829 Seventh Ave., New York City.
Helen Frances Doherty. B.A., 1903, Goucher College; Pd.M., 1907, New
York University. Educator. Instructor, Washington Irving High School,
New York City.
72 W. 12th St., New York City.
Arthur C. Eckstein. B.S., 1903, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 74» Manhattan, New York City; Principal,
Vacation School for Men and Boys, Bryant High School, Long Island City.
234 W. 122nd St., New York City.
132 New York University
Julia Willard Fairchild. B.A., 1893, Oberlin College. Educator. In-
structor, Public School No. 3 k, Bronx, New York City.
230th St. and Netherland Ave., Spuyten Duyvil, N. Y.
Nathaniel Filfuss. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 36, Manhattan, New York City;
Principal, Vacation School for Men and Boys, Borough of Richmond, N . Y.
83 W. 115th St., New York City.
Louis Goldberger. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 84, Brooklyn, N. Y.
277 7th St., New York City.
Walter Jacobson. B.A., 1900, College of the City of New York. Instructor,
Eastern District High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
771 Trinity Ave., New York City.
George Kintner. Pd.M., 1898; B.S., 1906, New York University. Edu-
cator. Principal of the schools of Carlstadt, N. J.
554 Hackensack St., Carlstadt, N. J.
Kotaro Koike. Doshisha College (Japan), 1905. Insurance agent. In
charge of the Japanese business of the Manufacturers' Life Insurance
Company, Toronto, Canada.
Care of Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co., Toronto, Ontario, Can.
Walter Clayton Leonard. B.A., 190k, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 2k, Manhattan, New York City.
161 W. 92nd St., New York City.
Martin G. Lippman. B.S., 1907, New York University. Educator. In-
structor, Public School No. 2k, Manhattan, New York City.
1302 Findlay Ave., New York City.
Albert Loewinthan. B.A., 1901, College of the City of New York. Educa-
cator. Instructor in English, DeWitt Clinton High School; Principal,
Evening Elementary School No. 70, for Men and Boys, Manhattan, New
York City.
339 E. 79th St., New York City.
Abraham London. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 122, Brooklyn, N. Y.
101 Van Buren St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Herman E. Mantel. B.A., 1908, New York University. Educator. In-
structor, Stuyvesant High School, New York City.
601 W. 156th St., New York City.
Floyd James Melvin (See Ph.D., 1912).
The Graduate School 133
Albert Monceief. Pd.M., 1903; B.S., 1905, New York University. Edu-
cator. Instructor in school, Wallington, N. J.
Newport, N. J.
Edward Benjamin Rappeport. B.A., 1905, College of the City of New York.
Caroline Harriet Smith. LL.B., 1905; LL.M., 1905; B.S., 1908; J.D.,
1910, New York University.
138 Montague St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Florence Marion Smith. B.A., 1903, Radcliffe College. Educator. In-
structor in English, Hunter College of the City of New York.
418 W. 118th St., New York City.
Howard Melville Tracy. B.A., 1906, Brown University. Educator.
Instructor, Curtis High School, Borough of Richmond, N. Y.
Barrett Boulevard, Tompkinsville, N. Y.
Aldice Gardner Warren. B.A., 1883, University of Rochester. Edu-
cator. Instructor in Mathematics and History, Army and Navy Prepara-
tory School, Washington, D. C.
4101 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D. C.
Simon Zevie. B.S., 1896, College of the City of New York; LL.B., 1902, New
York University. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 22 (boys),
Manhattan, New York City.
729 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
IQIO
M. Leon Arnowitt. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Washington Irving High School, New York City.
130 W. 113th St., New York City.
Nathan E. Buskin. B.A., 1908, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Commercial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
352 W. 118th St., New York City.
Harold G. Campbell. B.A., 1908, Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. Edu-
cator. Assistant Teacher of English, Eastern District High School, Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
373 E. 26th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Louis Sigmund Friedland (See Ph.D., 1912).
Isidore Glotzer. B.S., 1903, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1907, New York University. Educator. Instructor, Public School No.
4.2, Bronx, New York City.
1070 Longfellow Ave., New York City.
134 New York University
Charles Ham. B.S., 1908, New York University. Educator. Instructor,
DeWitt Clinton High School, New York City.
176 Lefferts Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Milton Franklin Htjsted. B.S., 1907; Pd.M., 1912, New York Univer-
sity. Educator. Superintendent of Schools, North Bergen, N. J.
North Bergen, N. J.
Walter R. Johnson. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, DeWitt Clinton High School, New York City.
165 W. 129th St., New York City.
Samuel Kendzur. B.S., 1906, College of the City of New York. Educator,
Instructor, High School of Commerce, New York City.
982 Rogers Place, New York City.
Joseph J. Klein (See Ph.D., 1911).
Mathilda A. Koehler. B.A., 1905, Cornell University.
120 Bedford St., Stamford, Conn.
Gertrude Mart Leete. Pd.B., 1898, Albany Normal College; Ph.B., 1905,
Syracuse University. Educator. Instructor, Richmond Hill High School,
Richmond Hill, N. Y.
Central Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y.
John J. B. Leonard. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 10, Bronx, New York City.
1658 Holland Ave., Van Nest, Bronx, New York City.
John Linker. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York; LL.B., 1903, New
York University. Educator. Instructor, Julia Richman High School,
New York City.
157 W. 111th St., New York City.
Louis G. Lippman. B.S., 1901, College of the City of New York; LL.B., 1908,
New York University. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 165,
Manhattan, New York City.
564 Riverside Drive, New York City.
Morris Moskowitz. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. lift, Manhattan, New York City.
569 Gates Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Thomas P. Murphy. B.A., 1905, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 110, Brooklyn, N. Y.
772 Monroe St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Nathan Peyser (See Ph.D., 1912).
The Graduate School 135
Charles F. Pietzsch. B.A., 1905, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 184, Manhattan, New York City.
2344 Second Ave., New York City.
Isaac Price. B.S., 1901, College of the City of New York. Educator-
Instructor, Curtis High School, New Brighton, N. Y.
72 E. 96th St., New York City.
Howard E. Reed. B.S., 1901, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 52, Bronx, New York City.
148 W. 13th St., New York City.
Amelia Pauline Sable. B.A., 1902, Hunter College of the City of New York,
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 39, Manhattan, New York City.
547 W. 142nd St., New York City.
Carl F. Schreiber. B.A., 1907, University of Michigan. Educator.
Teaching Fellow in German, Instructor in German, Ottendorfer Fellow,
New York University, 1909-12. Instructor in German, Yale University,
1913- .
New Haven, Conn.
Charles W. Siedler (See Ph.D., 1913).
Charles J. Smith. B.S., 1907, New York University Educator. Instruc-
tor in Latin, Mount Vernon High School, Mount Vernon, N. Y.
311 Rye Beach Ave., Rye, N. Y.
J. Clarence Smith. B.A., 1895, Princeton University. Educator. In-
structor, Manual Training High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
430 4th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
John A. Sullivan. B.A., 1907, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 109, Brooklyn, N. Y.
248 Lexington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Irving Masten Vanderhoff. B.S., 1902; M.D., 1905, New York Uni-
versity. Physician.
59 S. 10th St., Newark, N. J.
George Martin Weimar. B.A., 190k, University of Rochester. Educator.
Instructor, Stevens School, Hoboken, N. J.
206 Eleventh St., Hoboken, N. J.
Ephraim Weinstein. B.A., 1904, College of the City of New York. Edu~
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 188, Manhattan, New York City.
1919 Daly Ave., New York City.
136 New York University
191 1
Milton M. Adler. B.A., 1908, Adelphi College. Educator. Instructor,
Public School No. 165, Brooklyn, N. Y.
593A Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Mesmin Arenwald. B.A., 1906, College of the City of New York; Pd.M.,
1910, New York University. Educator. Instructor, Evander Childs
High School, Bronx, New York City.
2601 Bainbridge Ave., New York City.
Maxim Birnkrant. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York; LL.B.t
1909, New York University. Lawyer. Practicing law, New York City,
40 W. 111th St., New York City.
Nathaniel Brenner. B.A., 1905, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1907; J.D., 1909, New York University. Educator. Instructor, Public.
School No. 3 k, Manhattan, New York City.
95 Bostwick Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
John James Burke. B.A., 1895, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 16, Manhattan, New York City.
P. O. Box 550, Lynbrook, N. Y.
Marius A. Carpentier. B.S., 1889, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, DeWitt Clinton High School, New York City; Boys'
High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
602 Madison St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Simon Raymond Cohen. B.H., 1895; Rabbinical degree, 1899, Hebrew
Union College; B.A., 1898, University of Cincinnati. Clergyman.
Rabbi, Temple Beth Elohim, Brooklyn, N. Y.
784 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Foreman Dunbar. B.S., 1907, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Stuyvesant High School, New York City.
1083 E. 40th St., New York City.
S. Julius Feuerlicht. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 29, Bronx, New York City.
1544 Minford Place, New York City.
Henry M. Goldstein. B.S., 1908, College of the City of New York. Educa-
tor. Instructor in English, Central High School, Newark, N. J.
165 Manhattan Ave., New York City.
Samuel Greiner. B.A., 1910, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor in German, Harlem Preparatory School, New York City.
2041 Seventh Ave., New York City.
The Graduate School 137
George Edward Hewitt. B.S., 1910, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, DeWitt Clinton High School, New York City.
2353 Davidson Ave., New York City.
William Edward Honerkamp. B.A., 1906, College of the City of New
York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 85, Brooklyn, N. Y.
652 Decatur St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Charles W. Laffin. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Public School No. 14-8; Principal, Evening Elementary
School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
212 Keap St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Julius Landowne. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 79, Manhattan, New York City.
641 E. 176th St., New York City.
Maurice Lapman. B.S., 1906, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. J+, Bronx, New York City.
672 Division St., New York City.
Abraham Lefkowitz (See Ph.D., 1911t).
Herman B. Levine. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York. Educator
Instructor, Boys' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
150 Hooper St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Harry M. Marks. B.A., 1905, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 10, Brooklyn, N. Y.
2048 63rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Johnson L. Miner. B.A., 1895, Acadia University. Clergyman. Pastor,
First Baptist Church, Red Bank, N. J.
88 Maple Ave., Red Bank, N. J.
Emil Nielsen, Jr. B.A., 1910, New York University. Educator. Instruc-
tor in History and German, Mount Vernon Commercial School, Mount
Vernon, N. Y.
157 S. 6th Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Anna E. Robinson. B.A., 1900, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 50, Manhattan, New York City.
230 W. 75th St., New York City.
Ralph W. Rowland. B.A., 1909, New York University; B.D., 1912, Union
Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Presbyterian Church, Cir-
cleville, N. Y.
Circleville, N. Y.
138 New York University
Mary Louise Smith. B.S., 1910, New York University. Educator. Head
of Latin Department, Senior and Junior High Schools, Norwalk, Conn.
Box 46, Saugatuck, Conn.
Gardner Johnson Snyder. Pd.M., 1903; B.S., 1907, New York University.
Educator. Instructor, High School, Ridgewood, N. J.
55 S. Maple Ave., Ridgewood, N. J.
Benjamin M. Steigman. B.S., College of the City of New York. Educator-
Instructor, Stuyvesant High School, New York City.
934 Barretto St., New York City.
Fred Thompson. B.S., 1909, New York University. Educator. Principal,
Public School No. 12, Paterson, N. J.
Little Falls, N. J.
Samuel Weinstein. B.S., 1907, College of the City of New York. Educator*
Instructor, Public School No. llfl, Brooklyn, N. Y.
676 Willoughby Ave., New York City.
William Wallace Welsh. B.A., 1909, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Erasmus Hall High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
967 Argyle Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Frederick N. Westphal. B.S., 1908, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 36, Brooklyn, N. Y.
416 E. 85th St., New York City.
1012
Louis Abelson. B.S., 190k, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 158, Manhattan, New York City.
957 Aldus St., New York City.
Katherine Bauer. B.A., 190k, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor in Mathematics, Hunter College of the City of New
York.
233 W. 107th St., New York City.
John L. Beinert. B.A., 190k, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 3k, Manhattan, New York City.
615 Sterling Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Rodrigo Huguet Bonilla. B.A., 1903, University of Madrid (Spain).
Educator. Instructor, United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.
Annapolis, Md.
Harold Edwin Brown. LL.B., 1905; LL.M., 1906; B.S., 1910; J.D., 1911.
Lawyer. Practicing law, New York City.
Freeport, N. Y.
The Graduate School 139
William C. Bruning. B.A., 1907, College of the City of New York. Educa-
tor. Instructor, Public School No. 1^6, Manhattan, New York City.
484 W. 165th St., New York City.
John P. Cahill. B.S., 1910, New York University. Educator. Instructor,
Bay Ridge High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
28 Montgomery Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Harry Cohen. B.S., 1908, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, High School of Commerce, New York City.
635 E. 169th St., New York City.
Joseph Cohen (See Ph.D., 191 Ji).
Evie Corney. B.S., 1907, New York University. Educator. Assistant to
Principal, Public School No. 27, College Point, N. Y.
30 Wilson Ave., Flushing, N. Y.
Raphael D'Amour. B.A., 1882, College de Beaucaire (France). Educator.
Professor of French and Chairman of Committee on French Language and
Literature (Department of Philology), Brooklyn Institute of Arts and
Sciences. Directeur, Commission de Placement, SocietS Nationale des
Professeurs Frangais en Amerique.
879 Macy Place, New York City.
Benjamin Parke De Witt. B.A., 1909, New York University. Educator.
Secretary to the Chancellor; Secretary and Lecturer on Government, Wash-
ington Square College, New York University.
29 Whitney Ave., Elmhurst, N. Y.
(John) Jacob Gordon. B.S., 1906, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Erasmus Hall High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
263 Vernon Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Ray H. Hart. B.A., 1902, University of Rochester. Educator. Assistant
in English, Barringer High School, Newark, N. J.
724 De Graw Ave., Newark, N. J.
William R. Hayward. B.S., 1892, Valparaiso University; B.S., 1910, New
York University. Educator. Chairman, Commercial Department, Wash-
ington Irving High School, New York City.
186 Hamilton Ave., New Brighton, N. Y.
Edward M. Kanzer. B.A., 1906, College of the City of New York. Educator'
Instructor, Public School No. 36, Brooklyn, N. Y.
169 Hewes St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Margaret Ethel Lacey. B.S., 1911, New York University. Educator.
Head of Department, Public School No. 95, Manhattan, New York City.
782 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
140 New York University
Leo Lebowich. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 14.5, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Marcy Ave. and S. 9th St.
Norman C. Milliron. B.A., 1911, Mount Union Scio College; B.D., 1912,
Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Trinity United
Evangelical Church, Johnstown, Pennsylvania.
212 Morrison Ave., Johnstown, Pa.
John P. O'Mahonet. B.A., 1908, College of the City of New York. Educa-
tor. Instructor, Public School No. 77, Brooklyn, N. Y.
461 73rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Rebecca Palmland. B.S., 1911; Pd.M., 1913, New York University. Edu-
cator. Critic Teacher, Training School for Teachers, Brooklyn, N . Y.
1376 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Leslie A. Read. B.S., 1911, New York University. Educator. Head of
Department of Biology, Manual Training High School, Camden, N. J.
1273 Kenwood Ave., Camden, N. J.
Charles Brown Roach. B.A., 1909, Mount Union College; B.D., 1912,
Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, First Methodist
Episcopal Church, Asheville, North Carolina.
182 Patton Ave., Asheville, N. C.
Joseph Philip Selden. B.A., 1900, Olivet College. Instructor in United
States History and Latin, High School, Hoboken, N. J. Lecturer on Con-
sular Methods and on Municipal Government, New York University.
427 Gregory Ave., Weehawken, N. J.
Pauline M. Sesso. B.S., 1909, New York University. Educator. Instruc-
tor, Wadleigh High School, New York City.
303 E. 161st St., New York City.
Henry Frederick Andrew Stein (See Ph.D., 191k).
Beatrice L. Stevenson. B.A., 1910, Wellesley College.
14 Fifth Avenue.
Stanley Byron Vandersall. B.A., 1907, University of Wooster; B.D.,
1912, Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Associate General
Secretary, Ohio Christian Endeavor Union.
601 Chamber of Commerce, Columbus, Ohio.
Samuel Weiser. B.S., 1910, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Stuyvesant High School, New York City.
1378 Webster Ave., New York City.
The Graduate School 141
Emanuel M. Weiss. B.A., 1908, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 156, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1199 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Max S. Wilkes. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. lf.0, Bronx, New York City.
969 Faile St., New York City.
Clifford Wray.* B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Formerly
educator.
d. January 27th, 1914, Bloomfield, N. J.
1913
Sanford S. Bettman. B.A., 1906, College of the City of New York. Educa-
tor. Instructor, Public School No. 10, Bronx, New York City.
1956 Bathgate Ave., New York City.
James Augustus Bridges. B.S., 1909, New York University. Salesman.
District Manager, New England territory, Dentists' Supply Company.
220 W. 42nd St., New York City.
Joseph Busto. B.A., 1907, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 10, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1137 Bergen St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Kate Letitia Dickinson. B.A., 190k, Hunter College of the City of New
York; B.S., 1910, New York University. Educator. Instructor, Public
School No. 16, Bronx, New York City.
196 E. 205th St., New York City.
John Wesley Dutcher. B.A., 1912, New York University. Educator.
Acting Principal and Instructor in Science, Leonia (N . J.) High School.
177 Central Ave., Leonia, N. J.
Alice Marian Fleigh. B.S., 1912, New York University. Educator.
Singac, N. J.
Leon Wolf Goldrich. B.S., 1894, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1897; Pd.M., 1905, New York University. Educator. Public School
No. 62, Manhattan, New York City.
946 St. Mark's Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Mary Elizabeth Hansen. B.S., 1912, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 8, Perth Amboy, N . J.
339 Watson Ave., Perth Amboy, N. J.
142 New York University
Merlo K. W. Heicher. B.S., 1902; M.S., 1905, Susquehanna University;
B.D., 191k, Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Minister in
charge of the John Hall Memorial of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church,
New York City.
342 E. 63rd St., New York City.
James A. Hills. B.A., 1911, Oberlin College; B.D., 1913; Fellow in Leipzig
and Berlin, 1913-lk, Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor,
Methodist Episcopal Church, Westwood, N. J.
Westwood, N. J.
Lewis I. Israels. B.A., 190k, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 123, Brooklyn, N . Y.
95 Powell St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Gilbert Quinn Le Sourd. B.A., 1908, University of Puget Sound; B.D.,
1913, Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman and Educator. Formerly,
Pastor, Methodist Episcopal Church of Park Ridge and Montvale, N. J.
At present, Instructor in Mathematics, Cranford (N. J.) High School.
Cranford, N. J.
Alice McGuffey. B.A., 1911, Wellesley College.
Elmhurst, N. Y.
Ruby Clarke McIntire. B.S., 1911, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Washington Irving High School, New York City.
414 W. 121st St., New York City.
Ruth Merington. B.S., 1910, New York University. Educator. In-
structor, Bushwick Avenue High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1408 Bushwick Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Reynolds (Will R.) Miller. B.A., 1891, Central Normal Col'
lege of Texas; Pd.M., 1901; Pd.D., 1902, New York University. Sten-
ographer. Stenographer, Department of Public Charities, New York City.
311 E. 26th St., New York City.
John Preston Phillips. B.A., 1912, New York University. Studying
law, New York University Law School. Law clerk in the office of Graham
& Stevenson, New York City.
257 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
Marietta Riley. B.A., 1907; M.A., 1908, Adelphi College. Educator.
Assistant to Principal, Public School No. k3; Principal, Evening School
No. lkl, Brooklyn, N. Y.
869 St. John's Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School 143
Edwahd F. Taylor. B.A., 1899, Williams College. Educator. Instructor,
Commercial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Chichester Ave. near Hollis Ave., Hollis, N. Y.
Kennington Leaning Thompson. B.A., 1900, Cornell University. Edu-
cator. Principal, Public School No. 11, Jersey City, N.J.
168 Harrison Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
Elizabeth Wilder von Minckwitz. B.A., 1882, University of Kansas.
Educator. Tutor in Latin, Hunter College of the City of New York.
70 Morningside Ave., New York City.
Meyer Zlnman. B.A., 1910, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Bay Ridge High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
7719 14th Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
IQI4
Richard Aspinwall. B.A., 1912, West Virginia Wesleyan College; B.D.,
1914, Drew Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Methodist
Episcopal Church, Philippi, West Virginia.
Philippi, W. Va.
Harvey Lee Bagenstose. B.A., 1900, Wesleyan University. Educator.
Instructor in English, Commercial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
298 Parkside Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Anton Franz Blaum. B.A., 1909; M.A., 1913, St. Stephens College.
Educator. Instructor in English and German, Chengtu College, Chengtu,
China.
Chengtu, China.
Nathan Blechman. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York; Rabbinical
degree from Jewish Theological Seminary, New York City, 1906. Clergy-
man. Rabbi, connected with Young Women's Hebrew Association, New
York City.
4 E. 119th St., New York City.
Maria-Louise A. Carlucci. B.S., 1913, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 11, Bronx, New York City.
29 Evelyn Place, University Heights, New York City.
Louise Charvet. B.A., 1891, University of Paris. Educator. Tutor in
French, Hunter College of the City of New York.
544 W. 157th St., New York City.
Wa Chan Ching. B.S., 1911, University of California. Importer. Secre-
tary of the Wah Tai Company, New York City.
6 W. 29th St., New York City.
144 New York University
Samuel Cohen. B.A., 1913, New York University.
318A Hart St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Della Anne Coueson. B.A., 1908, Lebanon Valley College. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 4, Long Island City, N. Y.
158 Second Ave., Long Island City, N. Y.
Joseph Wilfred Fitzgerald. B.A., 1910, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Northeast High School, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
1313 W. Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
Franklin Pierce Germann, Jr. B.A., 1908, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 118, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1370 74th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Irwin Scofield Guernsey. B.A., 1913, New York University. Educator.
Instructor in History, DeWitt Clinton High School, New York City;
engaged in editorial work on New International Encyclopedia.
530 Van Cortlandt Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
Adeeb David Harrari. B.A., 1907, Syrian Protestant College {Beirut).
Business man.
Care of S. G. Mamary, 35 Broadway, New York City.
John Herbert Hoyt. B.S., 1909, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 12, Stapleton, N. Y.
29 Dongan St., West New Brighton, N. Y.
Willis Arnold Huntley. B. Lit., 1880, Cornell University. Educator.
Principal, Public School No. 45, Brooklyn, N. Y.
252 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Rene Thurston Le Valley. B.S., 1908, New York University. Educator.
Instructor in Chemistry and Mathematics, Stevens School, Hoboken, N. J.
180 Main St., Madison, N. J.
George Levy. B.A., 1904, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 62, Manhattan, New York City.
132 W. 112th St., New York City.
Mrs. Nina Purdy MacDonald. B.S., 1913, New York University. Author.
44 W. 50th St., New York City.
Raymond Wright Masters. B.A., 1912, New York University. Graduate
of General Theological Seminary, 1914. Clergyman. Curate, All Saints
Episcopal Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.
427 Sixth St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Charles Model. B.A., 1908, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Eastern District High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
366 Hewes St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School 145
John Daniel Moffett. B.S., 1911, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 155; Principal, Evening Elementary School
No. tf, Brooklyn, N. Y.
869 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Florence Abbie Rogers. B.A., 1901, Mount Holyoke College. Educator.
Instructor in Mathematics, Franklin High School, Hasbrouck Heights,
N. J.
Hasbrouck Heights, N. J.
George Hamilton Sisson Scofield. B.A., 1911, New York University!
B.D., 1913, Union Theological Seminary. Clergyman. Pastor, Lloyd
Presbyterian Church, Highland, N. Y.
36 Church St., Highland, N. Y.
Rey Marie Shissler. B.S., 1911, New York University. Educator. In-
structor, Public School No. 110, Manhattan, New York City.
415 E. 64th St., New York City.
Arthur Orestes Smith. B.S., 1911, New York University. Educator.
Principal, Public School No. 8, North Bergen, N. J.
4727 Hudson Boulevard, North Bergen, N. J.
Samuel David Stein. B.A., 1912, New York University.
181 Claremont Ave., New York City.
Lora Rose Sweeney. B.S., 1913, New York University.
333 Park Ave., Paterson, N. J.
Kaname Wakasugi. Bach, of Com., 1906, Tung Wen College (Japan);
LL.B., 1912, University of Oregon. Diplomat. Secretary, Japanese
Consulate General, New York City.
60 Wall St., New York City.
James Claude Wilson. B.A., 1911, Muskingum College; B.D., 1914, Drew
Theological Seminary.
New Concord, Ohio.
146 New York University
MASTERS OF PHILOSOPHY OF NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
1893-1905
1893
John Francis Yawger. Attended Cornell University. LL.B., 189b, Law
Department, University of Louisville. Lawyer. Practicing law, New
York City.
808 West End Ave., New York City.
1894
Edwin Alonso Blake. B.A., 1872; M.A., 1875, Wesleyan University;
Ph.D.; S. T. D. Clergyman. Minister in New England Conference,
Methodist Episcopal Church.
57 Rutland St., Boston, Mass.
1895
Roberta F. Watterson (Mrs. Emil Diebitsch). B.L., 1893, Smith College
38 Burnett Place, Nutley, N. J.
1896
Alice B. Dudek (See Ph.D., 1899).
Frank Gaylord Gilman. B.S., 1888, Cornell University. Educator.
Head of History Department, Barringer High School, Newark, N. J.
612 Highland Ave., Newark, N. J.
1897
James Charles Byrnes. B.S., 1886, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1890, New York University. Educator. Member of Board of Examiners,
Board of Education, New York City.
50 N. 19th St., Flushing, N. Y.
1900
Joseph Henry Wade. B.A., 1883, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. District Superintendent, City Schools, New York City.
454 W. 153rd St., New York City.
1905
John Dobbin McDowell. B.A., 1886; M.A., 189k, Royal University of
Ireland; Pd.M., 1905, New York University. Educator. Instructor in
Mathematics, Boys' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
77 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
The Graduate School 147
MASTERS OF SCIENCE OF NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
1890-1903
1890
William Alfred Hoe, Jr.* B.S., 1888, New York University. Engineer.
Engineering Corps, Croton Reservoir, Purdy's Station, 1890-7. The Wil-
liam A. Hoe, Jr. engineering prize given to students in the University School
of Applied Science, was founded by William A. Hoe in memory of his son.
*d. Feb. 19th, 1897, New York City.
1 891
Adolph Abram Himowich. B.S., 1886; M.D., 1887, New York University.
Physician. Practicing medicine, New York City.
1913 Madison Ave., New York City.
1892
Gilbert Laurie Anderson. B.S., 1890, New York University; B.S., 1893,
University of Edinburgh. Manufacturer. Manager, Portland Cement
£ Works, North Fleet, Kent, 189Jf.
Aylesford, Kent, England.
Raphael Monroe Mackenzie. B.S., 1890, Neio York University; Ph.D.,
1896, Johns Hopkins University. Educator. Professor of Chemistry and
Physics, Parsons College, Fairfield, Iowa, 1903.
Fairfield, Iowa.
1893
Henry Schofield Cooley. B.S., 1891, New York University; Ph.D., 1896,
Johns Hopkins University. Educator. Instructor in History, High
School, Paterson, N. J.
308 Broadway, Paterson, N. J.
Solomon Achillowitz Joffe. Educated Ekaterinoslav Gymnasium.
1894
George Cotner Mason. B.S., 1892; C.E., 1893, New York University.
Engineer. Vice-President, Hurley Mason Company, Portland, Oregon.
1126 Board of Trade Building, Portland, Oregon.
Leslie Jay Tompkins. B.S., 1890; LL.B., 1892; LL.M., 1897; J.D., 1903,
New York University. Educator and Lawyer. Professor of Law, New
York University, 1900-. Practicing law. New York City.
32 Waverly Place, New York City.
148 New York University
1895
William Whitlock Brush. B.S., 1893; C.E., 189^, New York University.
Engineer. Deputy Chief Engineer, Department of Water Supply, Gas
and Electricity, New York City.
194 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
(Charles) Ellison Crawford. B.S., 1891; LL.B., 1892, New York Uni-
versity. Lawyer. Practicing law, New York City.
Mountain Lakes, N. J.
Julien M. Isaacs.* B.S., 1893; LL.B., 1896, New York University. Lawyer.
*d. March 31st, 1905, New York City.
1896
William Lawrence A. Dalton (See Ph.D., 1898).
1897
John Dearling Haney. B.S., 1893, College of the City of New York; LL.B.,
1898, New York University. Educator. Principal, Public School No.
J/.6, Bronx, New York City.
468 Riverside Drive, New York City.
1898
Grace Bentley Beach. B.S., 189^, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Principal, High School, Hunter College of the City
of New York.
141 Loring Ave., Pelham, N. Y.
Charles William Edwards. B.S., 1894, Trinity College, North Carolina;
M.A., 1896, Tulane University. Educator. Professor of Physics, Trin-
ity College, Durham, North Carolina.
Durham, N. C.
Alexander Henry McDowell. B.S., 1896, College of the City of New
York. Salesman. Representing the Elliott-Fisher Company of New Jer-
sey (manufacturers of Standard Writing-Adding Machine, etc.).
314 Keyser Building, Baltimore, Md.
Frederick Gregory Reynolds (See Sc.D., 190^).
1899
Charles Edward Lucke. B.S., 1895, College of the City of New York; Ph.D.
1902, Columbia University. Educator and Engineer. Professor of Me-
chanical Engineering, Columbia University. Consulting Engineer in
New York City.
544 W. 142nd St., New York City.
The Graduate School 149
1900
Joseph Newman. B.A., 1897, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Commercial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
166 W. 139th St., New York City.
Anna M. Olsson. B.S., 1890, Wellesley College. Educator. Principal,
Public School No. Ul> Brooklyn, N. Y.
132 Joralemon St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
1901
Charles A. M. Vogt. B.S., 1897, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, Bryant High School, Long Island City, N. Y.
65 Elm St., Flushing, N. Y.
1902
Louis J. Cohen (Name changed to Curtman). B.S., 1899, College of the
City of New York; Ph.D., 1907, Columbia University. Educator. In-
structor in Chemistry, College of the City of New York.
600 W. 150th St., New York City.
Edward Thomas Hendee. B.S., 1900, New York University. Engineer.
Instructor in Metallurgical Chemistry, New York University, 1901-03.
Consulting engineer for Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Chicago, III.
4143 Sheridan Road, Chicago, 111.
Frederick Malling Pedersen (See Sc.D., 1905).
Charles Weisman. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York.
152 Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Margaret Barclay Wilson. B.S., 1900, Hunter College of the City of
New York. Educator. Professor of Physiology and Hygiene, Hunter
College of the City of New York.
72 E. 77th St., New York City.
1903
Arthur Edward Hill. B.S., 1901, New York University; Ph.D., 1903,
University of Freiburg. Educator. Professor of Analytical Chemistry
and Director of the Havemeyer Laboratory; Secretary of the Faculty of the
School of Applied Science, New York University.
University Heights, New York City.
Maximilian Phtlip (See Sc.D., 1906).
Joseph H. Shumer. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor in Physics, Girls' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
311 8th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Robert Frederic Smith. B.S., 1897, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor in Mathematics, College of the City of New York.
614 W. 146th St., New York City.
150 New York University
MASTERS OF SCIENCE
1904
William L. Prager. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York; Ph.D.,
1908, Clark University. Educator. Instructor in Chemistry, College
of the City of New York.
414 W. 120th St., New York City.
1905
William Arthur Horton. Ph.B., 1901, Illinois Wesleyan University.
Anna S. Mater. B.A., 1903, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Wadleigh High School, New York City.
Highland Boulevard, Sunnyside and Miller Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y.
August H. Peterson. B.S., 1896, College of the City of New York.
1906
Frieda Blumenberg. B.A., 1901, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, Eastern District High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
599 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
1907
William Mullan Campbell. B.S., 1898, New York University. Banker.
Formerly, Assistant Professor of Physics, New York University. Since
January 1, 1915, President of American Savings Bank, New York City.
126 E. 74th St., New York City.
Douglas Logan Connelly. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York.
Educator. Instructor, DeWitt Clinton High School.
110 Gladwin Ave., Leonia, N. J.
Doris Webster Hering. B.A., 190k, Vassar College. Educator. Tutor
in Physics, Hunter College of the City of New York.
128 W. 183rd St., New York City.
Caroline Wilhelmina Leeker. B.S., 1902, Hunter College of the City of
New York. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 1, Manhattan,
New York City.
28 De Graw Ave., Jamaica, L. I.
The Graduate School 151
1908
Hahrt Clark. B.S., 1907, New York University.
Roxbury, Delaware Co., N. Y.
Gorton Rosa Fonda. B.S., 1907, New York University.
16 Andrews Ave., Morris Heights, New York City.
Daniel Dana Jackson. B.S., 1893, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
930 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Orton Rat Smiley. B.A., 1903, Allegheny College. Educator. Professor
of Physics and Chemistry, Bloomfield High School.
523 Belleville Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J.
IQOQ
Warren G. Hubert. B.S., 1907, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Tutor in Mathematics, College of the City of New York.
269 McLean Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
Jacob Lippman. B.A., 190%, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 103, Manhattan, New York City.
1302 Findlay Ave., New York City.
Rosemary Florence Mullen. B.A., 1906, Hunter College of the City of
New York. Educator. Instructor, Washington Irving High School,
New York City.
420 E. 84th St., New York City.
Perley Lenwood Thorne. B.A., 1907, Colby College. Educator. Assist-
ant Professor of Mathematics, New York University.
University Heights, New York City.
William A. H. Zink. B.S., 1908, New York University.
403 Palisade Ave., West Hoboken, N. J.
IQIO
George Henry Barmeyer. B.S., 1909, New York University. Educator.
Instructor, DeWitt Clinton High School, New York City.
First Street, Bayside, N. Y.
Sister M. Augustina Brobston. B.A., 1902, College of St. Elizabeth.
Educator. Instructor, Convent of St. Elizabeth, Convent, N. J.
Convent^N. J.
Erich Hausmann {See Sc.D., 1911).
152 New York University
Max Hochberg. B.S., 190k, College of the City of New York; LL.B., 1908,
New York Law School. Educator. Instructor, Public School No. 63,
Manhattan, New York City.
649 E. 9th St.
Louis Luke Illich. B.A., 1903, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Eastern District High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
715 Tilden St., New York City.
Charles J. Lagerwall. B.S., 1900, College of the City of New York. Edu-
cator. Instructor, High School of Commerce, New York City.
419 E. 144th St., New York City.
Stuart Wilson. Pd.M., 190k; B.S., 1907, New York University. Edum
cator. Instructor, Eastern District High School.
226 Second Ave., New York City.
IOII
John Wesley Marden (See Sc.D., 1913).
Max Meltsner. B.A., 1906, College of the City of New York.
Williamsport, Pa.
Albert B. Pacini (See Sc.D., 1912).
Joseph A. Levy. B.S., 1903, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 160, Manhattan, New York City; Special
Teacher of Shopwork, New York City Schools.
36 Berwick St., Orange, N. J.
1912
Raymond Bartlett Earle (See Sc.D., 1913).
Edward Fleischer. B.S., 1903, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Bushwick High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1591 Union St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Auguste L. Pouleur. B.S., 1911, New York University.
Tuckahoe, N. Y.
1913
John Goldhaar. B.S.A., 1907, Cornell University. Educator. Instructor
in Shopwork, Public School No. 3k, Manhattan, New York City.
867 Southern Boulevard, New York City.
Julius Stanton Kingsley. B.S., 1910, New York University. Educator.
Principal, Northport (N. Y.) High School.
Northport, N. Y.
The Graduate School 153
Evelyn Sprague. B.A., 1911, Olivet College. Educator. Formerly
Instructor in Mathematics, Cranford (N. J.) High School.
Vermontville, Mich.
Louisa Margaret Webster. B.S., 1896, Hunter College of the City of New
York. Educator. Assistant Professor of Mathematics, and Director of
Summer High School, Hunter College of the City of New York.
Hunter College, 68th St., New York City.
1914
Joseph Cooper Blucher. B.S., 1913, Allegheny College. Educator and
Chemist. Assistant in Chemistry, New York University, 1913-lk- Head
of Department of Chemistry, New Castle (Pa.) High School.
1514 S. Jefferson St., New Castle, Pa.
Benjamin Franklin Gerding, Jr. B.S., 1912, New York University. Pub-
lic Service Commission, 1st, District, New York State.
2327 Valentime Ave., New York City.
Charles Clark Hasely. B.S., 1912, Allegheny College. Educator. In-
structor in Chemistry, New York University.
University Heights, New York City.
Burton A. Hayner. B.A., 1901, Williams College. Educator. Instructor,
Washington Irving High School, New York City.
751 W. 180th St., New York City.
Earl Brown Slack. B.A., 1901, Union College; Pd.B., 1902, Albany Nor-
mal College. Educator. Chairman, Physical Science, Washington Irving
High School.
600 Academy St., New York City.
Charles Solomon. B.A., 1902, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Manual Training High School, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1095 Prospect Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Louis Spivack. B.A., 1909, College of the City of New York. Educator.
Instructor, Public School No. 19, Manhattan, New York City; Principal,
Vacation School No. 129, Brooklyn, N. Y.
926 Southern Boulevard, New York City.
Douglas Stanley Trowbridge. B.S., 1910; C.E., 1911, New York Uni-
versity. Educator. Instructor in Engineering, New York University.
University Heights, New York City.
Samuel Weinik. B.S., October 1913, New York University. Chemist.
Junior Chemist, Bureau of Highways, New York City.
1770 Madison Ave., New York City.
154
New York University
STATISTICAL SUMMARY
Masters of Art Masters of Philosophy Masters of Science
Men 426 Men 6 Men 64
(10 deceased) (1 deceased)
Women 163
(1 deceased) Women 2 Women 11
Total
589
Total
8
Total
75
Teachers (115 women) 368
Teachers (1 woman)
5
Teachers (9 women) 49
Clergymen
118
Clergyman
1
Lawyers
14
Lawyer
1
Physicians (2 women)
4
Physicians 2
Engineer
1
Engineers 3
Chemist
1
Chemists 3
Authors (2 women)
3
Banker 1
Salesmen
3
Editors (1 woman)
2
Dramatic Critic
1
Manufacturers
2
Diplomat
1
Journalist
1
Insurance Agent
1
Broker
1
Merchants
2
Government Clerk
1
Contractor
1
Importer
1
Social Worker
1
Missionary (woman)
1
Stenographer
1
Law Clerk
1
No occupation (26
No occupation
1
No occupation 8
women)
29
(woman)
Unknown (5 women)
19
Unknown 8
Dead (1 woman)
11
Dead 1
75
The Graduate School 155
THE COUNCIL OF THE UNIVERSITY
The Council of New York University, incorporated the 18th of April, 1831, is a self-
perpetuating body, consisting of thirty-two members, each holding office for four years
or until his successor is elected. One-fourth of the members go out of office each year
on the fourth Monday of October, when their successors are elected by the council.
Officers of the Council
President — George Alexander, D.D.
Vice-President — Eugene Stevenson
Secretary — George A. Strong
Treasurer — William M. Kingslet
Roll of the Council
Date of Election Expiration of Term
1883. William S. Opdyke 1915
1887. George Alexander, D.D 1915
1891. Henry M. MacCracken, D.D., LL.D 1918
1892. John P. Munn, M.D 1916
1898. Willis Fletcher Johnson, L.H.D 1915
1898. Thomas E. Greacen 1915
1899. William M. Kingsley 1918
1900. James G. Cannon 1918
1903. Clarence H. Kelsey 1915
1903. William H. Porter 1915
1904. Eugene Stevenson 1916
1904. James Warren Lane 1917
1905. Frank A. Vanderlip 1917
1907. David A. Boody 1917
1907. Henry W. Hodge 1916
1907. George A. Strong 1916
1908. James Abbott 1916
1908. Henry M. Brown, D.D 1917
1908. Scott Foster 1915
1909. Cleland B. McAfee 1917
1909. Benjamin T. Fairchild 1917
1910. Alexander S. Lyman 1916
1910. Robert Mackenzie, D.D., LL.D 1915
1911. Elmer Ellsworth Brown, Ph.D., LL.D 1917
1913. Flnley J. Shepard 1916
1914. William R. Willcox, LL.D 1916
156 New York University
THE WOMEN'S ADVISORY COMMITTEE
In 1890 the Council of the University, recognizing that the enrollment of graduate
students included the names of several women as candidates for the Doctorate in Philos-
ophy, and recognizing further that the School of Pedagogy just founded was likely to
enroll women students in equal numbers with men, deemed it expedient that the Council
should have the co-operation of representative women in the promotion of the Univer-
sity's work for women, and accordingly established the Women's Advisory Committee.
President — Mrs. Edward C. Bodman, L.H.M.
Vice-President — Mrs. Roswell Eldridge
Secretary — Miss Emily Coddington, Ph.D.
Treasurer — Mrs. O. S. Lyford, Jr.
Honorary Members
Mrs. Finley J. Shepard, L.H.M. Miss Ida Northrop
Mrs. C. A. Herter Mrs. Russell Sage, L.H.M.
Term expiring 1915 Term expiring 1916
Miss Emily O. Butler, L.H.M. Mrs. Edward C. Bodman, L.H.M.
Mrs. David Dows, Jr. Miss Caroline Crane
Mrs. O. S. Lyford, Jr. Miss E. Mabel Clark
Mrs. Harry Kearsarge Kanpp
Term expiring 1917 Term expiring 1918
Mrs. John P. Munn, L.H.M. Mrs. Eugene Smith, L.H.M.
Miss H. Jean Aitken Mrs. Richard M. Hoe
Mrs. Lewis H. Lapham Miss Emily Coddington, Ph.D.
Miss Isabelle M. Kobbe Mrs. Roswell Eldridge
Mrs. L. Emmett Holt Miss Lucy P. Eastman
Miss Marie L. Constable
Sub-Committee of the Women's Advisory Committee on the Training
of Defective Children
Mrs. Edward C. Bodman, Chairman
Mrs. Edward R. Hewitt
Mrs. Shepard A. Morgan
Dr. Aristine Munn-Recht
Miss Marion R. Taber
Mrs. Wesley Mitchel
3 0112 105845983
158
New York University
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
SUMMARY OF UNIVERSITY STATISTICS 1914-1915 AS OF
MARCH 1, 1915
Divisions
CO
d
d v
en
9s
cp
a;
£*§
t»
o
"§
SPh
o
d
O
m
d
.2
,d
13
3
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0)
d
1— (
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o «
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~ s n
College of Arts
School of Applied Science . .
School of Law
School of Medicine
School of Commerce
Veterinary College
Washington Square College
School of Pedagogy
Graduate School
Summer School
Extramural Division
Woman's Law Class
Administrative Divisions:
General
Library
Grand Total
Duplications
Net Total
25
1
21
8
55
378
22
8
18
6
54
311
10
4
5
19
685
53
19
45
12
51
180
580
13
40
22
3
78
2645
10
10
2
22
15
40
5
9
54
457
7
23
3
33
515
39
7
91
65
8
54
91
65
405
938
*
1
2
36
10
3
36
10
65
220
275
133
29
97
754
6988
71
84
26
2
183
376
149
191
107
27
97
571
6612
42
48
154
83
201
6
43
13
57
647
647
*There are more than two thousand students taking courses in the Extra-
mural Division who are not included in the list of regular students of the
University.